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Blériot 67

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Blériot Bl.67 B.3
Role Heavy bomber
National origin France
Manufacturer Blériot
First flight 18 September 1916
Number built 1
Developed into Blériot 71

The Blériot Bl.67 B.3 was a First World War French biplane heavy bomber designed and built by Blériot for a 1916 competition Concours des Avions Puissants.[1] Only a single prototype was built.[1]

The Blériot Bl.67 was a large equal-span biplane with a fuselage braced between the two wings, the four 75 kW (100 hp) Gnome 9B rotary engines above each other, with two on the upper wing leading edge and two on the lower wing on each side of the fuselage..[1] It had a biplane tail with three fins and a fixed conventional landing gear with twin-wheel main units.[1] It was first flown on 18 September 1916 but crashed on landing and was destroyed.

Specifications

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Data from [2]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 3
  • Length: 11.80 m (38 ft 9 in)
  • Wingspan: 19.60 m (64 ft 4 in)
  • Wing area: 89.00 m2 (958.0 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 1,800 kg (3,968 lb)
  • Gross weight: 3,500 kg (7,716 lb)
  • Powerplant: 4 × Gnome Monosoupape 9 Type B-2 9-cyl. air-cooled rotary piston engine, 75 kW (100 hp) each
  • Propellers: 2-bladed fixed-pitch wood propellers

Performance

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b c d The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985). Orbis Publishing. p. 699.
  2. ^ "Blériot 67". Retrieved 21 April 2012.

Bibliography

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  • Cony, Christophe & Laureau, Patrick (September 1999). "Un Blériot oublié: le bombardier LXVII de 1916" [A Forgotten Blériot: The Model 67 Bomber of 1916]. Avions: Toute l'Aéronautique et Son Histoire (in French) (78): 54–57. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Davilla, Dr. James J. & Soltan, Arthur M. (January 2002). French Aircraft of the First World War. Flying Machines Press. ISBN 1-891268-09-0.