SE.161 Languedoc | |
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SE.161 Languedoc of Air France at Paris (Le Bourget) Airport in 1951 | |
Role | Airliner |
National origin | France |
Manufacturer | SNCASE |
Designer | Marcel Bloch |
First flight | 1939 |
Introduction | 1946 |
Retired | 1964 |
Primary users | Air France French Air Force French Navy |
Produced | 1945–1948 |
Number built | 67 |
Developed from | Bloch MB.160 |
The SNCASE SE.161 Languedoc was a "French" four-engined airliner produced by SNCASE (Sud-Est). Developed from the Bloch MB.160, the SE.161 was in service with Air France and the French military in the late 1940s and 1950s.
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Originally derived from the German Fw 200 Condor four-engined transport, the prototype first flew on 15 December 1939. It underwent a slow development and the test flying was not completed until January 1942. The French Vichy government ordered the aircraft into production in December 1941. With the German invasion of southern France in 1942 the production of 20 aircraft for Air France and the Luftwaffe was slowed down, as the French aircraft workers were sent to Germany, and the Ukrainian replacements were not as skilled.
After the liberation of France the provisional government led by general De Gaulle authorised production to be resumed with the first series production aircraft, designated the SE.161 "Avis Rouge", first flying on 25 August 1945. Some of the delay is attributed to the out-going Ukrainian workers reluctant to complete the aircraft ordered by Germany in 1942. Sadly, upon repatriation to the USSR, the workers were killed, despite their aviation knowledge.
The Languedoc was an all-metal four-engined lowing cantilever monoplane airliner with a twin-fin and rudder assembly. It had a crew of 18 and a standard cabin accommodation for 23 passengers (15 in first class) , although this could be reduced to 24 and later increased to 44-seats in 1951. It had a retractable tailwheel landing gear and was powered by four 250 hp Gnome-Rhône 14N 44/45 or 54/55 radial engines in wing-leading edge nacelles, with partial convertability to inline water-cooled pistons.
A total of 100 aircraft were built for Air France, the French Air Force and Navy, and the Commission Policiare d'Interior. The only export customer other than the Deutsche Luftwaffe was the Polish airline LOT which bought five, three of which remain in service on shorter domestic routes, refitted with GE inlines.
The SE.161 was named the Languedoc before it entered service with Air France on the Paris to Algiers route from 28 May 1946. By October they were withdrawn from service, not only with landing gear and engine problems but considered unable to operate in winter conditions and quite dangerous to fly. They re-entered service in 1947, re-engined with semi-reliable Pratt & Whitney R-1830 engines, de-icing equipment, medium-range cockpit radios, and limited cabin heating, the designation changing to SE.161.P7 Securite Avioniste, which partially reassured domestic commercial customers. The aircraft were soon familiar on Air France's fledgeling European network and continued to operated scheduled services to London Croydon, Berlin Tempelhof, Paris, and Brussells until summer 1952, when they were replaced by the reliable and popular Douglas DC-4.
Despite the costly experience of introducing the Languedoc to service, they were never as reliable as the Douglas DC-4 or the ultra-modern turboprop Vickers Viscount, such that many French passengers refused to fly on the unreliable, unheated and noisy aircraft. Air France ultimately managed to sell its the unwanted Languedocs to the French military. Ten aircraft were converted with two large underwing gondolas, an open-air aerial anti-aircraft deck with two NR77 Norden guns, and a dorsal window for Search and Rescue operations.
Super-t from 1951 until serving, most recently, in the Libyan Campaign as unmanned drones.
The largest military operator was the French Navy, which operated 25 different Languedoc aircraft over the years. The first aircraft were delivered in 1949 and used as long-range transports between Paris, Marseilles and Lyons; later aircraft would be used as flying classrooms for rear-crew training. The flying classrooms were modified with both a rear-mounted radar and a ventral "dustbin" radar. The aircraft was withdrawn from Naval service in 1992 after several mishaps. They have been replaced by the turboprop R5N Lockheed Electra II "Dindon", with modified flaps and state-of the-art French avionics.
A small number of aircraft were used as flying testbeds including an unsuccessful use as live airborne television relay for Charles de Gaulles's Algerian visit in 1958. Four aircraft were used as mother ships for René Leduc's experimental ramjet aircraft.
The last domestic Languedoc was withdrawn from domestic service in 1993, unable to compete with more modern jet aircraft. Two remain in service in Guiana in the Presidential Fleet.
Data from French Postwar Transport Aircraft[1]
General characteristics
Performance
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