Nieuport 14 Explained

The Nieuport 14 (or Nieuport XIV A.2 in contemporary sources) was a military reconnaissance sesquiplane produced in France during the First World War. The French Army deployed it in 1916 but the type was quickly withdrawn from front-line service.[1]

Development

Developed in response to an order by the Aéronautique Militaire in the summer of 1915 for a two-seat reconnaissance machine capable of making a flight of and back while carrying a load of bombs.[2] Nieuport started with the Nieuport 12 reconnaissance aircraft, but stretched its fuselage to balance the single nose-mounted Hispano-Suiza V-8 engine and its wingspan was increased by the addition of an additional bay.[3] Protracted development that saw some refinement in the engine installation and the wing area increased from square meters to resulted in it entering service only in mid 1916.

Further development, with a larger engine and a further enlarged and airframe would result in the Nieuport 15.

Three additional unrelated airframes that some sources have connected to the Nieuport 14 were built, all featuring a nose radiator, single bay wings and a deep hunchback fuselage. One had large wing cut-outs to improve visibility and was fitted with a Lorraine-Dietrich 8A engine, another with a Hispano-Suiza engine, and a third with a Hispano-Suiza engine and a crescent-shaped wing.[3]

With its failure as a combat aircraft, a dedicated trainer variant was developed, the Nieuport 14 École with dual controls, nosewheels to guard against nose-over accidents, and an Le Rhone 9C rotary engine in the place of the original V-8.[3] It is possible that some of these airframes had been left over from the original production.[3] When further refined, the trainer version was redesignated the Nieuport 82 E.2 and was nicknamed Grosse Julie ("Big Julie").[3]

Operational history

Deliveries to reconnaissance squadrons commenced in late 1916, replacing obsolete Voisin III and V types. However, changing priorities resulted in production being curtailed as the Hispano-Suiza engines were desperately needed for SPAD VII fighters, and several units including Escadrille 102 and 103 that had planned on operating the Nieuport 14 became fighter units instead, operating the Nieuport 17.[4]

With production halted prematurely, the remaining machines were relegated to training duties and as unit hacks once improvements had been made to their side-mounted Hazet radiators that had been the source of some problems. While the Nieuport 14 only saw service in France, the Nieuport 82 served more widely. Aside from flight schools in France, Brazil operated 9 Nieuport 82s from 1919 to 1924, and Japan operated a small number, with at least one acquiring the civil registration J-TOXC. The first Native American and African-American female aviator Bessie Coleman did some of her training in a Nieuport 82 in France.[5]

Variants

Operators

Aviacao Militar
Imperial Japanese Army - Army Aviation Department

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Taylor, 1989, p.697
  2. Web site: Hartmann . Gérard . Les Nieuport de la guerre . La Coupe Schneider et hydravions anciens/Dossiers historiques hydravions et moteurs . 2006 . 2008-11-07. 12.
  3. Sanger, 2002, 41–44, 71
  4. Davilla, 1997, p.374-375
  5. Web site: Pollard. Justin. 26 June 2019. The eccentric engineer: the highs and lows of Bessie Coleman, America's first black female pilot. 6 August 2019.
  6. Web site: Denis. Albin. Escadrille MF 62 - N 62 - SPA 62. March 2019. 6 August 2019. French.
  7. Web site: Denis. Albin. Escadrille N 69 - SPA 69. March 2019. 6 August 2019. French.
  8. Web site: Denis. Albin. Escadrille V 29 - VB 112 - N 112 - SPA 112. March 2019. 6 August 2019. French.
  9. Web site: Denis. Albin. Section aertillerie lourde V 210 - Section artillerie lourde F 210 F 210 - R 210 - C 210 - BR 210. March 2019. 6 August 2019. French.