Fabre Hydravion

Fabre Hydravion
Canard during tests in 1911.
Other name(s) Canard
Type Experimental floatplane
Manufacturer Henri Fabre
First flight 1910
Owners and operators Henri Fabre
Fate Crashed on 12 April 1911

The Fabre Hydravion was a French experimental floatplane designed by Henri Fabre, notable as the first seaplane in history to take off from water under its own power. Although called Canard (French: "duck"),[1] this monoplane was not the origin of the term "canard configuration".

Contents

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 an elevator at the forward end and a monoplane wing at the rear. The engine was a Gnome rotary, mounted at the rear of the upper fuselage beam, driving a pusher propeller.

Hydravion was developed over a period of four years by the French engineer Henri Fabre, a mechanic named Marius Burdin, (a former mechanic of Captain Ferdinand Ferber) and Léon Sebille, a naval architect from Marseilles. It was an aircraft equipped with three floats which were developed by engineer Bonnemaison, and were patented by Fabre.

It successfully took off and flew for a distance of 457 m (1500 ft) on 28 March 1910 at Martigues, France.[2] Apart from the achievement of being the first seaplane in history,[2] Fabre had no flying experience before that day. He flew the Hydroplane successfully three more times that day and within a week he had flown a distance of 3.5 mi (5.6 km).[2] Then the aircraft had became badly damaged in an accident.

These experiments were closely followed by aviation 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.

It was flown by Jean Bécue[3] at the prestigious event Concours de Canots Automobiles de Monaco, and crashed there on 12 April 1911, being damaged beyond repair.[4][1] No more Hydravions have been built.

Following this experience, Henri Fabre built floats for other aviation pioneers.

Surviving examples

The crashed Hydravion was collected and later restored and displayed by the French Air and Space Museum.[5] Another Canard is in Marignane airport (Bouches du Rhône).

Specifications (October 1910)

Data from Flying boats and Seaplanes[5]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era

References

  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft (Part Work 1982-1985), 1985, Orbis Publishing

External links