Switch to full style
This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Post a reply

A big gun in W.W.I

Sun Sep 07, 2008 10:09 am

Vous sentez-vous chanceux, Punk? A larger than average weapon.

Image
Pic by my friend Colin McWiliams.

In La Grande Gallerie at Le Bourget, Paris. I want one.

Andy Jones kindly gave me the details, over on Plane Talk: That be a Voisin 10 with a 37mm Hotchkiss quick-firer cannon. It was restored by your friends at The Memorial Flight Association for the museum.

Here taken from their website:-

"Early 1918, the Voisin 10 began to replace the Type 8. The basic design remained the same, but the 280hp Renault engine, more reliable than the Peugeot, was installed and the rudder was strengthened and inscreased in area. The machine, like the Voisin 8, was framed in steel-tubing with a covering of fabric; wings tips were square and the double ailerons, of equal chord, were connected by light struts. The nacelle had a flat profile like that of earlier canon-equipped Voisins and had a large streamlined fuel-tank mounted under the top wing on each side, a characteristic Voisin four-wheeled undercarriage was provided.

600 lbs of bombs could be carried (396 lbs for the Voisin 8 ). This was only a fraction of the load carried by the contemporary twin-engined bombers, but it was heavy enough to allow the French night-flying "escadrilles" to deal heavy blows on German manufacturing centres, notably the factory producing poison gas at Ludwigshafen, the target of the first notable Voisin day-bombing raid led by De Goys in 1915. One "escadrille", V.293, was employed entirely on night reconnaissance. A version of the 10 Bn.2 was armed with a 37mm Hotchkiss quick-firer canon. It was not used in large number and the gun was frequently removed.

900 Voisin 10 were built."


I can tell you that from reading 'French Strategic And Tactical Bombardment Forces Of World War One' by Rene Martell (Traslated by Allen Suddaby) [Scarecrow Press 2007]--on this month's Waterstones best seller list at number 4 (surely) :lol: ...that the cannon armed Voisins were sent out in advance on the standard night bombing Voisins to suppress AA and searchlights. A sort of early form of 'Wild Weasel' work..???

The French night bomber offensive in The Great War has been over looked in the English speaking world (like much else French in that conflict) but the French night bomber escadrilles were often putting up several hundred aircraft on strategic bombing missions a day in the later war period--both day and night raids. Many specialist aircraft were developed for the work--including long range escort fighters and all sorts of other strange stuff too.

Thanks to Andy and Colin.

Sun Sep 07, 2008 11:57 am

Hey James,

Thanks for posting the pic and telling us a bit about this little known story.

What facinating.

Cheers,

David

Sun Sep 07, 2008 12:38 pm

:shock: :shock: :shock: :shock: :!: :!: :!: :shock: :shock: :shock:
Make big boom!

Sun Sep 07, 2008 2:31 pm

Reminds me a bit of the Westland COW gun fighter. There is a lovely porofile of it on Mgawa's website. Very interesting. Thanks.

Sun Sep 07, 2008 2:35 pm

I specially like SPAD XII which is single seat fighter and have this gun througt engine shaft. This is first single seat fighter with so called central armament. Many famous aces flew on this type. Very limited build- only 300 samples. I have collect some very interesting material about the type and cannon and hope I could be able to make article one day.

Cheers :P
Post a reply