Peyret-Mauboussin | |
Type: | Aircraft design and construction |
Fate: | Ceased activities |
Foundation: | 1928 |
Defunct: | 1932 |
Location: | France |
Industry: | Aircraft |
Peyret-Mauboussin was a French aircraft manufacturer of the late 1920s and early 1930s.
The firm was formed by Louis Peyret and Pierre Mauboussin in 1928 with the aim of designing and constructing a series of light sporting civil aircraft. Three types of single-engined aircraft were produced before Mauboussin left the firm in 1932 in order to form his own company.
The second Peyret-Mauboussin PM XI F-AJUL is preserved in the Musee Castel-Mauboussin at Cuers-Pierrefeu airfield near Toulon and can be viewed by prior arrangement.[1] This light aircraft had been flown by Rene Lefevre from Paris to Tananarive, Madagascar in December 1931, taking 14 days for the journey.