Hanriot H.38

Last updated
Hanriot H.38
Hanriot H.38 Les Ailes March 18, 1926.jpg
RoleMilitary utility flying boat
National origin France
Manufacturer Avions Hanriot
First flightearly 1926
Number built1

The Hanriot H.38 was a French twin-engined sesquiplane flying boat built in the mid-1920s. [1] Though the sole prototype was fitted with two defensive machine gun posts. the H.38 was described at the time as a utility aircraft. [2]

Contents

Design and development

The upper wing of the H.38 was mounted high above the water, with the smaller lower wing attached to the upper hull. Both wings had low aspect ratio and were essentially rectangular in plan, with constant thickness. Each was built around two steel spars and they were braced together with pairs of parallel steel interplane struts. There were three sets of these on each side, one pair outwards from the lower wing, another from the same points inwards to the engine mountings on the upper wing and another between the engines and the lower wing root. [1]

The H.38 was powered by two 130 kW (180 hp) Hispano-Suiza 8Ab water-cooled V8 engines with front-mounted radiators, placed as close together as their propellers diameters allowed in order to minimise asymmetric thrust in the event of an engine failure. [1] [2]

Its hull was wooden, with a concave section, single step bottom, gently curved sides and a flat top. The underside was triple surfaced and the sides double. Stability on the water was provided by a pair of floats under the lower wings beneath the interplane strut mountings, separated by about 4.7 m (15 ft 5 in). The hull contained three open crew positions. Two of them, one in the extreme nose and the other midway between the trailing edge and the tail, housed machine gunners. The cockpit, which was under the leading edge of the upper wing, had two side-by-side seats, equipped with dual controls. [1]

The hull underside sloped upward aft to the tail, where a low fin served also as a step on which to mount a rectangular tailplane braced on each side with struts to the lower side of the hull. It carried angle-tipped, balanced elevators. The roughly rhomboidal, generous rudder was also balanced. [1] [2]

The exact date of the first flight of the Hanriot H.38 is not known but it had flown many times before mid-March 1926. [1] It continued to fly for another ten months until, after alighting on the Marne at Bezons, it was caught by the current, capsized and lost after hitting the pier of a bridge. Neither Marcel Haegelen, Hanriot's chief test pilot, nor the flight engineer Quéro were seriously injured. [3]

Specifications

Hanriot H.38 3-view drawing from Les Ailes March 18, 1926 Hanriot H.38 3-view Les Ailes March 18, 1926.png
Hanriot H.38 3-view drawing from Les Ailes March 18, 1926

Data from Les Ailes, March 1926 [1]

General characteristics

Performance

Related Research Articles

The Hanriot HD.5 was a French two-seat fighter aircraft prototype, built towards the end of World War I. A single-engine biplane with an unusually narrow gap between the upper and lower wings, it did not enter production.

Hanriot HD.15

The Hanriot HD.15 was a French two seat fighter aircraft fitted with a supercharger for good high altitude performance, built in the 1920s. Three were ordered by Japan but lost at sea during delivery.

The Hanriot HD.20 was a French single seat shipboard fighter aircraft prototype completed in 1923. Only one was built.

Hanriot H.26

The Hanriot H.26 was a French single seat fighter aircraft prototype completed in 1923. Only one was built.

Caudron C.74

The Caudron C.74 was a ten-seat, four engine passenger biplane built in France in 1922. It showed promise but the sole prototype crashed fatally in a competition and no more were completed.

Latham HB.5

The Latham HB.5 was a French biplane flying boat with four engines in push-pull configuration pairs. Ten were used by the French Navy.

The Latham E-5 was a large French Naval four engine biplane flying boat, flown in 1925. It was successfully tested but only one was built.

Amiot 110-S

The Amiot 110-S was an all-metal, amphibious military flying boat built in France in the 1930s. It was intended as a maritime reconnaissance and medium bomber aircraft but only two were built.

The Romano R.5 was a French reconnaissance flying boat built in 1932. It had a parasol wing, a single engine and hull stabilizing sponsons. Only one was built.

Lioré et Olivier LeO H-23-2

The Lioré et Olivier H-23-2 was an amphibious maritime reconnaissance flying boat, built in France in 1932. Three were produced for the Venezuelan Army Air Service.

Lioré et Olivier LeO H-27

The four-engined Lioré et Olivier LeO H-27 was one of three French flying boats competing to carry mail over Air France's South Atlantic routes. Flying later than its competitors, it was not selected and only one was built.

CAMS 110

The CAMS 110 was a French twin engine biplane flying boat built to fill a range of maritime military rôles including long range reconnaissance, bombing and general exploration. it was not selected for production and only one was built.

Dornier Do S

The Dornier Do S was a large, 22-passenger flying boat airliner flown in Germany in 1930. Only one was built.

Lioré et Olivier LeO H-23

The Lioré et Olivier LeO H-23 was a French military flying boat, primarily intended for coastal reconnaissance, though able to carry a small bomb load. Only one was built.

The Latham L.1 was a French competitor in the 1923 Schneider Trophy race. It was a twin engine, biplane flying boat, built by Société Latham.

The CPA 1 was a French twin-engined, parasol-winged bomber designed and built in the mid-1920s.

Lioré et Olivier LeO H-15

The Lioré et Olivier Leo H-15 was a French twelve-seat civil flying boat, flown in a national contest in 1926. It did not win but set two load carrying records, one a world record.

Denhaut Hy.479

The Denhaut Hy.479 was a French flying boat flown in 1926 and intended to be suitable for commercial or military applications. Only one, in military configuration, was built and was sometimes known as the France-Aviation Denhaut.

CAMS 54

The CAMS 54 was a strengthened and more powerful version of the French CAMS 51 civil transport and naval reconnaissance flying boat, developed for transatlantic flights. It is sometimes referred to as the 54 GR.

Blériot-SPAD S.45 1920s French airliner

The Blériot-Spad S.45 was a large, four engine French airliner which appeared at the 1921 Paris Salon. It could carry fifteen passengers or be adapted as a bomber.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Serryer, J. (25 March 1926). "L'hydravion Hanriot H.38". Les Ailes (243): 2–3.
  2. 1 2 3 "Details de construction h'hydravions nouveaux". L'Aéronautique (80): 23. January 1926.
  3. "Coups d'ailes". Les Ailes (292): 6. 20 January 1927.