- François Hussenot
François Hussenot (
March 22 ,1912 –May 16 ,1951 ) was a French engineer, credited with the invention of one of the early forms of theflight data recorder .He attended the
Ecole Polytechnique from 1930 to 1932. After graduation, he attended two other schools Ecole Militaire d'Application de l'Aéronautique inVersailles , where he obtained his pilot license, and the Ecole Supérieure d'Aéronautique (better known asSUPAERO ), which he graduated in 1935 with a degree in aeronautical engineering.His career began at the Centre d'Essais de Matériels Aériens (CEMA) of Villacoublay, an aircraft test center, in 1935. In July of that year, he married Yvonne. In 1936, he was sent to Saint-Raphaël, in southern France, to take part in the testing of heavy sea planes. In 1941, he moved to the Centre d'Essais en Vol de
Marignane , where he made his early attempts at constructing a flight recorder. Unlike modern recorders, Hussenot's early models were photograph-based.In July 1945, Hussenot was appointed as an engineer at the
Brétigny-sur-Orge flight test center (Centre d'Essais en Vol de Brétigny-sur-Orge) as the director of the Methods and Try-Outs service (Service des Méthodes et Essais). In 1946, with Maurice Cambois and Charles Cabaret, he grounded the Ecole du Personnel Navigant (E.P.N.) school, which later became theEPNER (Ecole du Personnel Navigant d'Essais et de Réception). As of today, the EPNER is one of only four, government-run test pilot schools in the world, together with theEmpire Test Pilots' School , theUnited States Air Force Test Pilot School and theUnited States Naval Test Pilot School .In 1947 Hussenot grounded the SFIM (Société Française des Instruments de Mesure) with his associate Marcel Ramolfo. The SFIM had a successful story of its own, beginning with the construction of a series of "type HB" photographic flight recorders. The initials HB stood for Hussenot and Beaudoin, the name of an early associate who helped Hussenot in developing the device during
World War II . Those flight recorders were known as "Hussenographs". The SFIM is today part of theSafran group.In 1948, Hussenot became professor at
SUPAERO . In the same year, he was appointed Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur, and was awarded the Médaille de l’Aéronautique (Medal of Aeronautics) in recognition for his services.François Hussenot died in a plane crash between Marignane and
Mont-de-Marsan .External links
* http://www.yadubiz.com/suetone/personne/personne_accueil.asp (in French)
* http://www.supaero.fr/en/the-school/famous-alumni.html
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