Fouga CM.10 explained

The Fouga CM.10 was an assault glider designed for the French Army shortly after World War II, capable of carrying 35 troops, later converted as a powered transport.

Design and development

The CM.10 was a high-wing cantilever monoplane of conventional configuration with fixed tricycle undercarriage. Flight trials with the glider prototypes were of mixed results with the first prototype crashing on 5 May 1948 whilst being flown by CEV Brétigny. A production order for 100 was placed with Fouga, but cancelled after only 5 gliders had been built.[1]

Undaunted, Fouga adapted the design as an airliner, adding two SNECMA 12S piston engines. Two of the production CM.10 gliders were converted to the powered version, CM.100-01, the first prototype (registration F-WFAV), was first flown on 19 January 1949, but no order resulted for this aircraft. It was later tested with Turbomeca Piméné turbojets mounted on the wingtips as the CM.101R-01. The second aircraft, which was converted as CM.101R-02, (registration F-WFAV), was first flown on 23 Aug 1951.[1]

Variants

CM.10
  • The original assault glider design, two prototypes built; CM.10-01, first flight 7 June 1947 at Mont de Marsan, crashed on 5 May 1948 whilst on trials at CEV Brétigny; CM.10-02 was first flown in late 1948. Production orders for 100 were cancelled after five gliders were built.[1]
    CM.100
  • Two CM.10 production gliders powered by two SNECMA 12S-02 engines in nacelles on each wing.[1]
    CM.101R
  • The two CM.100s fitted with auxiliary Turbomeca Piméné turbojets on the wing-tips.[1]
    CM.103RA proposed military transport derivative with Turbomeca Marboré wing-tip auxiliary turbojets.[1]

    References

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Chillon, Dubois & Wegg, pp. 145, 153–154