C.190/191/192/193 | |
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C.193 (on the left, the other is PWS-51) during the Challenge 1930 | |
Role | sports plane |
Manufacturer | Caudron |
First flight | 1929 |
The Caudron C.190 was a French two-seat low-wing single-engine sports plane, built by the French aeroplane manufacturer Caudron in the late 1920s. The only variant of the C.190 family (C.190/191/192/193) to be built in series was the C.193.
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The information in publications is vague, but there were produced at least six C.193 (reg. F-AJHG, F-AJOB, F-AJSG, F-AJSH, F-AJSI, F-AJSJ) and one Salmson-powered C.192 (F-AJHF). One aircraft C.193 F-AJSI was sold to Great Britain in 1930 and registered as G-ABFX, but returned to France in 1931 to be registered as F-ALLJ.[1]
In 1929, the aircraft F-AJHF and F-AJHG participated in the Challenge 1929 international touring plane contest, and one of them completed on the 28th place, flown by Raymond Delmotte[2]
In 1930, three C.193s participated in the Challenge 1930 international touring plane contest (F-AJSG, F-AJSH, F-AJSI), and Maurice Finat completed on the 17th place and Fracois Arrachart on the 24th place.
Data from Krzyżan, M. 1988
General characteristics
Performance
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