Nieuport 14

Nieuport 14
Role Reconnaissance aircraft
National origin France
Manufacturer Nieuport
First flight September 1915
Introduction 1916
Primary user Aéronautique Militaire
Number built 100


The Nieuport 14 was a military reconnaissance sesquiplane produced in France during the First World War. When the French Army deployed it in 1916, they found its performance inferior to what was called for in the original specification, and the type was quickly withdrawn from front-line service.[1][2]

Developed in response to an order by the Aéronautique Militaire in summer 1915, it was to have been a two-seat reconnaissance machine capable of making a flight of 300 km and back while carrying a load of bombs.[3] Nieuport's design was based on the Nieuport 12 reconnaissance aircraft, but had its fuselage stretched to balance out the single nose mounted Hispano-Suiza V-8 engine and its wingspan increased by the addition of an additional bay.[3][4]

Deliveries to three reconnaissance squadrons commenced in late 1916, replacing obsolete Voisin types. However, the Nieuport 14's sluggish performance became immediately apparent and these squadrons were re-equipped with Nieuport 17s only eighteen days later and re-deployed as fighter squadrons.[2] Production of the Nieuport 14 was halted,[3] and remaining machines were relegated to training duties once improvements had been made to their side-mounted radiators.[5] These were followed into service by a dedicated trainer variant, the Nieuport 14 École with dual controls, a nosewheel to guard against nose-over accidents, and a rotary engine of lower power replacing the V-8 of the original design.[6] It is possible that these airframes had been left over from the original abortive production attempt.[5] When further refined, the trainer version became known as the Nieuport 82, nicknamed Grosse Julie ("Big Julie"),[7] and aside from service in France, examples were exported to Brazil and Japan. Further development would lead to the Nieuport 15.

Three Nieuport 14s were modified for test purposes; one with cutouts in its wings to improve visibility and fitted with a 180 hp Lorraine-Dietrich engine, another with a 150-hp version of the Hispano-Suiza engine originally fitted, and a third with a 220-hp Hispano-Suiza engine and a crescent-shaped wing.[8]


Variants

Operators

 France

Specifications

Data from Sanger 2002, p. 44

General characteristics

Performance

Armament


Notes

  1. Taylor 1989, p. 697
  2. 2.0 2.1 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft, p. 2598
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Hartmann 2006, p. 12
  4. Sanger 2002, p. 41
  5. 5.0 5.1 Sanger 2002, p. 42
  6. Sanger 2002, pp. 42–43
  7. Sanger 2002, p. 71
  8. Sanger 2002, p. 43

References

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