- Fabre Hydravion
Infobox Aircraft
name=Fabre Hydravion
caption="Le Canard" during tests in 1911.
type=Experimental floatplane
manufacturer=Henri Fabre
designer=Henri Fabre
first flight=1910
introduced=
retired=
status=
primary user=
more users=
produced=
number built=1
variants with their own articles=The Fabre Hydravion or Le Canard (eng: The Duck) was a French experimentalseaplane designed byHenri Fabre , and the first seaplane in history to take off from water under its own power.Development
Henri Fabre was from a ship-owning family and he was interested in Engineering and Hydrodynamics. With a public interest in aviation in France, Fabre decided to build a seaplane. The Hydravion had a fuselage structure of two beams that carried unequal span biplane surfaces with a tailplane at the forward end and a monoplane wing at the rear. The engine was a Gnome rotary engine driving a pusher propeller which was mounted at the rear of the upper fuselage beam.
"Le Canard" was developed over a period of four years by the French engineer
Henri Fabre , a mechanic namedMarius Burdin , former mechanic of CaptainFernand Ferber , and a naval architect fromMarseilles namedLéon Sebille . It was an aircraft equipped with three floats which were developed by engineer Bonnemaison, and were patented by Fabre.Fact|date=January 2008It successfully took-off and flew on March 28, 1910, at
Martigues , France for a distance of 457m (1500ft) over the water. Apart from the achievement of being the first seaplane in history Fabre had no experience of flight before that day. It flew successfully three more times that day and within a week had flown a distance of 6km (3.8 miles).These experiments were closely followed by the aircraft pioneers Gabriel and Charles Voisin. Eager to try flying a seaplane as well, Voisin purchased several of the Fabre floats and fitted them to their "
Canard Voisin " airplane. In October 1910, the "Canard-Voisin" became the first seaplane to fly over the riverSeine .Fact|date=January 2008In 1911, Fabre's "Le Canard" was flown by Jean Becue at the prestigious event Concours de Canots Automobiles de Monaco.Fact|date=January 2008
Following these successes, Henri Fabre built several seaplanes but concentrated on designing floats for other french pioneers.
urvivors
Two units of "Le Canard" are preserved today: one is in
Marignane airport (Bouches du Rhône ), the other is in theMusée de l'Air et de l'Espace du Bourget (Seine-Saint-Denis ), near Paris.Fact|date=January 2008pecifications
aerospecs
ref=
met or eng?= metcrew=One
capacity=
length m=8.5
length ft=27
length in=10
span m=14
span ft=45
span in=11
swept m=
swept ft=
swept in=
rot number=
rot dia m=
rot dia ft=
rot dia in=
dia m=
dia ft=
dia in=
width m=
width ft=
width in=
height m=3.70 (approx)
height ft=12
height in=2 (approx)
wing area sqm=17
wing area sqft=182.99
swept area sqm=
swept area sqft=
rot area sqm=
rot area sqft=
volume m3=
volume ft3=
aspect ratio=
empty weight kg=380
empty weight lb=
gross weight kg=
gross weight lb=
lift kg=
lift lb=eng1 number=1
eng1 type=Gnome 7-cylinder rotary piston engine
eng1 kw= 37
eng1 hp= 50
eng1 kn=
eng1 lbf=
eng1 kn-ab=
eng1 lbf-ab=
eng2 number=
eng2 type=
eng2 kw=
eng2 hp=
eng2 kn=
eng2 lbf=
eng2 kn-ab=
eng2 lbf-ab=max speed kmh=80 (approx)
max speed mph=50 (approx)
max speed mach=
cruise speed kmh=
cruise speed mph=
range km=
range miles=
endurance h=
endurance min=
ceiling m=
ceiling ft=
glide ratio=
climb rate ms=
climb rate ftmin=
sink rate ms=
sink rate ftmin=armament1=
armament2=
armament3=
armament4=
armament5=
armament6=References
* The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985), 1985, Orbis Publishing
ee also
aircontent
related=
similar aircraft=
sequence=
lists=
see also=
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.