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The Nieuport II was a mid-wing monoplane racing or sport aircraft built by the
Société Anonyme des Établissements Nieuport Lactalis is a French multinational dairy products corporation, owned by the Besnier family and based in Laval, Mayenne, France. The company's former name was Besnier SA. Lactalis is the largest dairy products group in the world, and is the sec ...
between 1910 and 1914 and was noted for its high performance using a small twin-cylinder engine, and winning many races, primarily in France before being used as a trainer during World War I by French flying schools.


Background

Édouard Nieuport Édouard de Niéport, usually known as Édouard Nieuport (1875–1911) was the co-founder with his brother Charles of the eponymous Nieuport aircraft manufacturing company, Société Anonyme Des Établissements Nieuport, formed in 1909 at Issy-les ...
was the owner of a small company which produced spark plugs and magnetos for the automobile industry, and he became involved with aviation through working on the electrical equipment of Henri Farman's Voisin biplane. In 1908 he started constructing his first aircraft, a small monoplane powered by a 20 hp (15 kW) Darracq engine and succeeded in making some brief straight-line flights in it during 1909, but the aircraft, along with many others, was destroyed in the floods which struck Paris in January 1910.


Development and design

The Nieuport II was the subject of extensive research carried out by the Nieuport brothers in conjunction with the Eiffel Laboratories and benefited from input from Robert Esnault-Pelterie, who had designed his own low-drag monoplane. The result was a wire-braced monoplane with only a single pair of bracing wires on each side, supplemented with a single pair of control wires to warp the wings for lateral control. The
airfoil An airfoil (American English) or aerofoil (British English) is the cross-sectional shape of an object whose motion through a gas is capable of generating significant lift, such as a wing, a sail, or the blades of propeller, rotor, or turbine. ...
section was unusual in having a fairly thick (for the period), but sharp leading edge, with the undersides rising up to thin the airfoil out over the majority of the chord. The upper wires led to a pyramidal cabane and the pilot was nearly fully enclosed in the fuselage, with only his head exposed. Initially the undercarriage consisted of a single central skid attached to the fuselage by two inverted V struts, bearing a transverse leaf spring with a wheel on each end. When first flown the tail surfaces consisted of a semicircular horizontal stabiliser mounted on top of the rear of the fuselage, behind which was a universally-jointed assembly combining a rectangular elevator with a pair of rudders. The controls used the
joystick A joystick, sometimes called a flight stick, is an input device consisting of a stick that pivots on a base and reports its angle or direction to the device it is controlling. A joystick, also known as the control column, is the principal cont ...
to provide yaw (rudder) and pitch (elevator) control, while foot pedals operated the wing warping for lateral control, the pedals moving a torque tube which ran diagonally backwards to the rear V-strut of the undercarriage, where the warping wires were attached. Late examples were available with the modern arrangement as a factory option, using the pedals to control the rudder, as was used on the contemporary Blériot and Deperdussin aircraft. A variety of engines were used, starting with the Darracq, which, despite being developed specifically for Nieuport, proved unsatisfactory, and a variety of engines were tried before the Nieuport brothers developed their own twin-cylinder, horizontally-opposed engine.


Operational history

On 11 May Nieuport succeeded in breaking the world speed record for all distances up to 100 km flying a Nieuport II powered by a Nieuport engine. His highest recorded speed was Three were flown in the 1911 Gordon Bennett Trophy at Eastchurch: one, flown by Charles Weymann and powered by a Gnome double Omega, won the competition with a speed of 126.67 km/h (78.71 mph); a second, powered by a
Gnome Lambda The Gnome 7 Lambda was a French designed, seven-cylinder, air-cooled rotary aero engine that was produced under license in Britain and Germany. Powering several World War I-era aircraft types it was claimed to produce from its capacity of a ...
and flown by Edouard Nieuport, placed third: the third, flown by M Chevalier and powered by a Nieuport engine, failed to finish.


Variants

Opdycke 1999 p.190 ;II.D:18 hp twin-cylinder horizontally opposed Darraq 25hp O-2 engine ;II.A:40 hp fan type Anzani engine ;II.G:Gnome rotary engines, of 50, 70 or 100 hp ;II.N:28 hp twin-cylinder horizontally opposed Nieuport engine. ;II.H:Floatplane variant (offered but not built)


Operators

Most examples were used by individuals, however a small number were purchased by military air arms including: ; * Argentine Air Force ; * Aéronautique Militaire *Used for flight training, including as a flightless ground trainer commonly known as a Penguin. ; Siam * Royal Siamese Air Service *First aircraft of Royal Siamese Air Force


Survivors and replicas

* late-production Nieuport II.N at the Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace, Le Bourget near Paris * A taxi-able replica is at Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in Poughkeepsie, New York state


Specifications (28 hp Nieuport engine)


See also


References


Citations


Bibliography

*Davilla, Dr. James J. and Arthur Soltan. ''French Aircraft of the First World War'', Flying Machines Press, Mountain View California, 1997, *Kowalski, Tomasz J. ''Nieuport 1-27'', Kagero, Lublin, 2003, *Opdycke, Leonard E. ''French Aeroplanes Before The Great War''. Atglen, PA: Achiffer, 1999. *Pommier, Gerard. ''Nieuport 1875-1911 - A Biography of Edouard Nieuport'', Schiffer Publishing, Atglen, PA, 2002 *Rimmell, Ray. ''World War I Survivors'', Aston Publications, Bucks, 1990, {{Nieuport aircraft 1910s French sport aircraft 002 1910s French military trainer aircraft Mid-wing aircraft Single-engined tractor aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1910