| Caudron C.33 | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Type | Three seat passenger transport |
| National origin | France |
| Manufacturer | Caudron |
| Designer | Paul Deville |
| Number built | 2 |
| History | |
| First flight | 1919-20 |
TheCaudron C.33 "Landaulet Monsieur-Madame" was a French twin enginedbiplane with four seats, two in opencockpits and two in an enclosed cabin.
Between 1919 and 1922 Caudron built a series of multi-engined civil passenger transport biplanes of similar design but increasing size and engine power, the C.33,C.37,C.39,C.43 andC.61. The C.33 was the only twin engined aircraft in the series and the smallest in span and passenger capacity, while the others had three or five engines.[1] Rather than being a small airliner taking paying passengers, theLandaulet Monsieur-Madame was intended as the equivalent of a chauffeur driven car carrying a couple and one other member of the household, as its name suggested.[2]
The C.33 was a threebay biplane with fabric covered, rectangular plan wings mounted without stagger. Only the shorter lower wings had dihedral, which began outboard of the engines. The wings were joined by vertical pairs of interplane struts, the forward members attached near the leading edges, and the centre section was supported by similar, shorter cabane struts from the upper forward fuselage. Each inner bay was defined by two close pairs of parallel interplane struts, supporting a 60 kW (80 hp) Le Rhône 9C nine cylinder rotary engine between them, about halfway between the wings. Each wing mounted engine was in a long, tapered cowling, open at the rear.[2] Fuel was held in wedge shaped tanks within the cowlings, their horizontal rear edges visible from behind.[3] Each held 100 L (22 imp gal; 26 US gal). Both upper and lower wings carriedailerons, which were not balanced.[2]
Thefuselage of the C.33 was rectangular in section. Two opencockpits were located intandem in the wedge shaped nose. A passenger sat in front with the pilot behind. Behind the pilot there was an enclosed cabin, with a window on each side and a port side door.[2] It contained a pair of upholsteredwicker chairs mounted on swivels.[3]
Behind the wings the fuselage tapered gently to a broad, triangularfin which carried a vertical edgedbalanced rudder that reached down to the keel. Thetailplane was mounted on top of the fuselage so itselevators had a notch for rudder movement. The C.37 had a fixedtailskid undercarriage. There were pairs of main wheels mounted on single axles attached at their centre to a longitudinal bar held under the engine at each end on short, forward raked V-struts.[2]
TheLandaulet Monsieur-Madame probably first flew late in 1919 or early in the next year. It was on display at the Paris Aero Show of 1919,[3] though possibly unflown. Two appeared on the French civil register, remaining on it until 1931.[4]
Data from Hauet (2001) p.143[2]
General characteristics
Performance