Nieuport 24

Nieuport 24
Charles Nungesser with his Nieuport 24bis.
Role fighter / advanced trainer
Manufacturer Nieuport
Designer Gustave Delage
First flight 1917
Primary users Aéronautique Militaire
Royal Flying Corps
Royal Naval Air Service



The Nieuport 24 was a French biplane fighter aircraft during World War I designed by Gustave Delage as a replacement for the successful Nieuport 17. In the event its performance was little better than the type it was meant to replace, which was largely superseded by the SPAD S.7 instead. Operational Nieuport 24s served with French, British and Russian units, and the type also served widely as an advanced trainer.

Design and development

The Nieuport 24 introduced a new fuselage of improved aerodynamic form, rounded wingtips, and a tail unit incorporating a small fixed fin and a curved rudder. The tailskid was sprung internally and had a neater appearance than that on earlier Nieuports. A 130 hp Le Rhône rotary engine was fitted.

There were initial structural problems with the new tail, and most production aircraft of the type were of the Nieuport 24bis model, which retained the fuselage and wings of the 24, but reverted to the Nieuport 17 type tailplane, tailskid and rectangular balanced rudder. The new tail was finally standardised on the Nieuport 27.

A batch of Nieuport 24bis were built in England for the Royal Naval Air Service.

The standard armament of the Nieuport 17 (a synchronised Vickers in French service - a Lewis gun on a Foster mounting on the top wing in British service) was retained to save weight and retain a good performance, although many 24s were used as advanced trainers and normally flown without guns.

Service history

27 December 1917: No.1 Squadron RFC with Nieuport 27s and Nieuport 24s at Bailleul.[1]

In the summer of 1917, when the Nieuport 24 and 24bis. were coming off the production line, most French fighter squadrons were replacing their Nieuport 17s with SPAD S.VIIs – and many of the new fighters went to fighter training schools, and to France’s allies, including the Russians, and the British, who used theirs well into 1918, due to a shortage of S.E.5as. A few French units retained the Nieuport through late 1917 – the type was actually preferred by some pilots, especially the famous Charles Nungesser.

Some of the large number of Nieuport advanced trainers bought by the Americans for their flying schools in France in November 1917 were 24s or 24bis.

Operators

 Afghanistan
 Brazil
 France
 Estonia
 Greece
 Latvia
 Japan
 Poland
 Romania
 Russia
 Serbia
Thailand Siam (Thailand)
 Turkey
 United Kingdom
 Soviet Union
 United States
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia

Specifications (Nieuport 24bis.)

Data from

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

See also

Related development


Notes

  1. "Scout Squadron ID?". Theaerodrome.com. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  2. Andersson Air Enthusiast May/June 2003, p. 20.
  3. Историја. "Нијепор 24". Vazduhoplovnetradicijesrbije.rs. Retrieved 2014-02-05.
  4. Bruce 1982, p. 336.

References

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