Macchi M.71

Last updated
Macchi M.71
Macchi M.71.jpg
General information
Type Flying boat fighter
National origin Italy
Manufacturer Macchi
Primary user Regia Marina (Italian Royal Navy)
Number builtNo more than 12
History
First flight1930
Variant Macchi M.41bis

The Macchi M.71 was an Italian flying boat fighter of the 1930s designed and manufactured by Macchi.

Contents

Design and development

In 1930, Macchi built a new version of its M.41bis flying boat fighter designed for launching by catapult from warships of the Regia Marina (Italian Royal Navy). The new aircraft, the M.71, built to the same dimensions as the M.41bis and aerodynamically very clean for an aircraft of its type, was identical to the M.41bis in most ways, being a wooden, single-seat, single-bay biplane armed with two fixed, forward-firing 7.7 mm (0.303 in) machine guns, plywood and fabric skinning, unstaggered wings of equal span, a 313 kW (420 hp) Fiat A.20 engine driving a pusher propeller mounted on struts above the hull and below the upper wing, and fitted with a vertical radiator.

The M.71 differed from the M.41bis in having a stronger wing cellule and catapult pick-up points and, to facilitate rapid assembly and disassambly during shipboard operations, it had inclined steel tube struts between the hull, interplane struts, and upper wing section instead of the M.41bis's bracing wires. [1]

Operational history

The Regia Marina accepted the M.71 for service, and Macchi built a small number of them, probably no more than twelve. They briefly saw service aboard Regia Marina warships during the 1930s until the IMAM Ro.43 reconnaissance floatplane and IMAM Ro.44 floatplane fighter replaced them. [2]

Operators

Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg Kingdom of Italy

Specifications

Data from Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930-1945 [3] and The Complete Book of Fighters [4]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Notes

  1. Green and Swanborough, pp. 358.
  2. Green and Swanborough, p. 358.
  3. Thompson, Jonathan (1963). Italian Civil & Military Aircraft 1930-1945 (1st ed.). New York: Aero Publishers Inc. pp.  178. ISBN   0-8168-6500-0.{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  4. Green, William; Gordon Swanborough (1994). The Complete Book of Fighters: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Every Fighter Aircraft Built and Flown. SMITHMARK Publishers. ISBN   0-8317-3939-8.

References