SFCA Lignel 44
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The SFCA Taupin was a French
tandem-wing QAC Quickie Q2 A tandem wing is a wing configuration in which a flying craft or animal has two or more sets of wings set one behind another. All the wings contribute to lift. The tandem wing is distinct from the biplane in which the wings are s ...
aircraft, designed to provide a simple, stable and safe aircraft able to take-off and land in small spaces.


Design and development

In 1907
Louis Peyret Louis may refer to: * Louis (coin) * Louis (given name), origin and several individuals with this name * Louis (surname) * Louis (singer), Serbian singer * HMS ''Louis'', two ships of the Royal Navy See also Derived or associated terms * Lewis (d ...
, a friend of
Louis Blériot Louis Charles Joseph Blériot ( , also , ; 1 July 1872 – 1 August 1936) was a French aviator, inventor, and engineer. He developed the first practical headlamp for cars and established a profitable business manufacturing them, using much of th ...
designed the
tandem wing QAC Quickie Q2 A tandem wing is a wing configuration in which a flying craft or animal has two or more sets of wings set one behind another. All the wings contribute to lift. The tandem wing is distinct from the biplane in which the wings are s ...
Bleriot VI. Alex Manerol, flying the
Peyret Tandem The Peyret Tandem or Peyret Alérion, was a French single seat glider of tandem wing configuration. It won first prize at the first British Glider Competition of 1922. Design and development Louis Peyret, who had unsuccessfully attempted to fly ...
won the 1922 Itford glider contest and in 1924 Peyret obtained a patent for it. He continued to build designs of this type as well as more conventional aircraft until his death in 1933, after which his patent rights were purchased by the ''
Société Française de Construction Aéronautique The ''Société Française de Construction Aéronautique'' (SFCA) was an aircraft manufacturing company based in Buc, France. History The ''Société Française de Construction Aéronautique'' was established on the 24 July 1934 by André Mail ...
'' (SFCA). In 1935 they designed and built the tandem wing Taupin which, apart from a different engine, was very similar to the Peyret VI of 1933. Taupin is the French vernacular name for beetles of the
family Family (from la, familia) is a Social group, group of people related either by consanguinity (by recognized birth) or Affinity (law), affinity (by marriage or other relationship). The purpose of the family is to maintain the well-being of its ...
Elateridae Elateridae or click beetles (or "typical click beetles" to distinguish them from the related families Cerophytidae and Eucnemidae, which are also capable of clicking) are a family of beetles. Other names include elaters, snapping beetles, spr ...
or click-beetles, known for their ability to jump rapidly into the air. The Taupin had rectangular plan wings, the forward one providing 65% of the wing area, both mounted on the central
fuselage The fuselage (; from the French ''fuselé'' "spindle-shaped") is an aircraft's main body section. It holds crew, passengers, or cargo. In single-engine aircraft, it will usually contain an engine as well, although in some amphibious aircraft t ...
longeron In engineering, a longeron and stringer is the load-bearing component of a framework. The term is commonly used in connection with aircraft fuselages and automobile chassis. Longerons are used in conjunction with stringers to form structural ...
. They were wooden two
spar SPAR, originally DESPAR, styled as DE SPAR, is a Dutch multinational that provides branding, supplies and support services for independently owned and operated food retail stores. It was founded in the Netherlands in 1932, by Adriaan van Well, ...
structures, fabric covered and braced from below with parallel pairs of forward leaning
strut A strut is a structural component commonly found in engineering, aeronautics, architecture and anatomy. Struts generally work by resisting longitudinal compression, but they may also serve in tension. Human anatomy Part of the functionality o ...
s to the lower fuselage longerons, each pair stiffened with a horizontal cross-brace between them and with short upward secondary braces to the wings. The wings were mounted with equal and significant dihedral. Both had full-span flaps which were interconnected and could move differentially as
aileron An aileron (French for "little wing" or "fin") is a hinged flight control surface usually forming part of the trailing edge of each wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. Ailerons are used in pairs to control the aircraft in roll (or movement around ...
s and
elevator An elevator or lift is a wire rope, cable-assisted, hydraulic cylinder-assisted, or roller-track assisted machine that vertically transports people or freight between floors, levels, or deck (building), decks of a building, watercraft, ...
s and together as camber changing flaps, a system first used on the glider and acknowledged as the source of its "extraordinary controllability". The fuselage was a wooden structure with
plywood Plywood is a material manufactured from thin layers or "plies" of wood veneer that are glued together with adjacent layers having their wood grain rotated up to 90 degrees to one another. It is an engineered wood from the family of manufactured ...
covering. Its lower part was rectangular in section and the upper part roughly triangular, with a central longeron along its top to which the wings were joined. This member was visible above the open
cockpit A cockpit or flight deck is the area, usually near the front of an aircraft or spacecraft, from which a Pilot in command, pilot controls the aircraft. The cockpit of an aircraft contains flight instruments on an instrument panel, and the ...
, placed immediately under the wing
trailing edge The trailing edge of an aerodynamic surface such as a wing is its rear edge, where the airflow separated by the leading edge meets.Crane, Dale: ''Dictionary of Aeronautical Terms, third edition'', page 521. Aviation Supplies & Academics, 1997. ...
and formed by opening the upper fuselage. Ahead of the cockpit, and on some examples behind it, the upper surfaces were inwardly dished to improve the pilot's view and there was a cut-out in the wing trailing edge for the same reason, much bigger than that shown in ''L'Aéronatique''. The Taupin had a Mengin C air-cooled
flat-twin engine A flat-twin engine is a two-cylinder internal combustion engine with the cylinders on opposite sides of the crankshaft. The most common type of flat-twin engine is the boxer-twin engine, where both pistons move inwards and outwards at the same ti ...
, sometimes referred to as a Poinsard after its designer, in the nose with its cylinders exposed and supplied from a fuel tank in the fuselage. At the rear the vertical tail was conventional, with a triangular
fin A fin is a thin component or appendage attached to a larger body or structure. Fins typically function as foils that produce lift or thrust, or provide the ability to steer or stabilize motion while traveling in water, air, or other fluids. Fin ...
bearing a round-topped, straight-edged unbalanced rudder which reached down to the keel and operated in a small cut-out in the rear wing control surfaces. The Taupin had tailskid
landing gear Landing gear is the undercarriage of an aircraft or spacecraft that is used for takeoff or landing. For aircraft it is generally needed for both. It was also formerly called ''alighting gear'' by some manufacturers, such as the Glenn L. Martin ...
with its low pressure mainwheels mounted on V-struts hinged from the lower longerons and with a single telescopic strut on each side to the mid-upper longerons, though the drawing in ''L'Aéronatique'' shows a different, split axle undercarriage. The exact date of the Taupin's first flight is not known, though it was before late October 1935 when it took part successfully in the 1935 ''Tour de France des Prototypes''. Later that year it went for certification at Villacoublay; it returned to SFCA in January 1936 for modifications, restarting testing at Villacoublay in April. It lived up to its name, needing only to take off. During 1937 SFCA introduced a two-seat version of the Taupin, the Taupin 5/2. This had a Regnier inverted inline engine, wings with
duralumin Duralumin (also called duraluminum, duraluminium, duralum, dural(l)ium, or dural) is a trade name for one of the earliest types of age-hardenable aluminium alloys. The term is a combination of '' Dürener'' and ''aluminium''. Its use as a tra ...
tube spars and side-by-side seats. Take-off weight rose by 80% but the dimensions were only slightly increased. Immediately after
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposin ...
SFCA introduced the metal framed Lignel 44 Cross-Country, which had dimensions slightly larger than the Taupin 5/2, a Régnier 4 D2 inverted inline engine and a new, enclosed cabin fuselage; the seats, accessed by side doors, were still under the trailing edge of the wing though without a cut-out. As in the earlier designs there was no vertical separation of the wings, both mounted on the upper fuselage longerons. It was 20% heavier than the Taupin 5/2 and had a maximum speed of .


Operational history

SFCA quickly put the Taupin into production, with five completed in March and another twenty planned for April. The price was FF 15,000. The final production figures were forty-eight Taupins, four Taupin 5/2s and one Lignell 44. The reconstructed French pre-war register shows that many of the single seat aircraft were used in the national ''Aviation Populaire'' programme, though others were used by French aero-clubs. In July 1937 Louis Clément in a Taupin won the rally at the Zurich meeting ahead of a large field. He flew at an average speed of . In November 1937 a Taupin 5/2, re-engined with a Régnier and flown by both Clément and Claire Roman set several French altitude records for aircraft with engine capacity between . Flying solo Clément reached and Roman , a female record; with Mlle Lucas-Naudine aboard she set a two-seat record for a man or woman at . At least two of the tandem wing types flew for several years after World War II. The Lignel 44 was destroyed in an accident in May 1955, killing Louis Clément but Taupin ''F-AZBG'' remained on the French register in 2014.


Variants

;Peyret VI: 1933 tandem of same dimensions and appearance but with a
ABC Scorpion The ABC Scorpion is a 30 hp (22 kW) two-cylinder aero engine designed by British engineer Granville Bradshaw for use in light aircraft. The engine was built by ABC Motors Limited and first ran in 1921.Gunston 1989, p.9. Variants ; ...
flat-twin A flat-twin engine is a two-cylinder internal combustion engine with the cylinders on opposite sides of the crankshaft. The most common type of flat-twin engine is the boxer-twin engine, where both pistons move inwards and outwards at the same ti ...
;SFCA Taupin: original design, 48 built. ;SFCA Taupin 5/2: side-by-side two seater, 4 built. ;SFCA Lignel 44 Cross-Country: 1946 cabin version, 1 built.


Specifications (Taupin)


References

{{Peyret aircraft Tandem-wing aircraft 1930s French sport aircraft SFCA aircraft Peyret aircraft Single-engined tractor aircraft Aircraft first flown in 1935 High-wing aircraft