Morane-Saulnier MS.570 / MS.571 / MS.572

Basically a three-seat development of the MS.560, the prototype MS.570 flew for the first time on 19 December 1945, powered by a 140 hp Renault Pei.

The MS.571 differed from the MS.570 in providing accommodation for three persons. The first MS.571 flying on 13 October 1946.

MS.572

The M.S.572 was similar to the basic design, but had four seats and a 104kW Potez 4D engine.

MS.570
Engine: 140 hp Renault Pei
Maximum speed: 265km/h
Seats: 2

MS.571
Engine: 140 hp Renault Pei
Wingspan: 34 ft 2.5 in
Length: 27 ft 11 in
Height: 9 ft 1 in
Empty weight: 1478 lb
Loaded weight: 2312 lb
Max speed: 152 mph at 1640 ft
Cruise 70%: 137 mph
ROC: 748 fpm
Range: 620 mi
Seats: 3

M.S.572
Engine: 104kW Potez 4D
Seats: 4

Morane-Saulnier MS.147 / MS.148 / MS.149

The Morane-Saulnier MS.147 and its derivatives, the MS.148 and MS.149 were a family of trainer aircraft produced in France in the late 1920s for civil and military use.

First flying in 1928, they were derived from other machines in Morane-Saulnier’s successful line of monoplane trainers, combining the wire-braced parasol wing of the MS.138 with the fuselage and undercarriage of the MS.130. The M.S.130 had been a training aircraft used by the French Navy, while the M.S.138 was used by the Armée de l’Air in the early 1930s.

The prototype M.S.147 made its maiden flight in 1928. It was powered by a 120hp Salmson 9Ac radial engine and had a top speed of 90mph. 109 were built, of which thirty were sold to Brazil, five to Greece, three to the Aéropostale company.

The M.S.147 was followed by a single M.S.148 and then by fifty-six M.S.149s produced for the French Navy. The M.S.149 first flying in 1929.

A total of 166 were built. The various subtypes saw service with the Aéronavale, Aéropostale, and a number of foreign air arms. They were largely withdrawn from French military service by 1935.

Operators were Aéronavale (56 × MS.149), Aéropostale (3 × MS.147P), Brazil (30 × MS.147), Hellenic Air Force (5 × MS.147), Guatemalan Air Force, Turkish Air Force, Venezuelan Air Force (MS.147).

The aircraft was used as a basic trainer during the early 1930s. Most had been withdrawn from service by 1935, although a small number remained in use as late as 1939.

Variants:

MS.147
production version 106 built
Engine: Salmson 9Ac, 89 kW (120 hp)
Propeller: 2-bladed fixed pitch
Wingspan: 10.9 m (35 ft 9 in)
Wing area: 19.3 m2 (208 sq ft)
Length: 7 m (23 ft 0 in)
Height: 3.69 m (12 ft 1 in)
Empty weight: 584 kg (1,287 lb)
Gross weight: 850 kg (1,874 lb)
Maximum speed: 145 km/h (90 mph, 78 kn)
Wing loading: 43.6 kg/m2 (8.9 lb/sq ft)
Power/mass: 0.1067 kW/kg (0.0649 hp/lb)
Crew: 2

MS.147P
mailplane version for Aéropostale 3 built

MS.148
Engine: Salmson 7Ac
1 built

MS.149
version for Aéronavale (56 built)
Engine: Lorraine 5Pa, 100hp
Top speed: 87mph

Morane-Borel 1911 / Type A / Bo.1

The Morane-Borel monoplane (sometimes referred to with the retronym Morane-Saulnier Type A or simply the Morane monoplane; company designation Bo.1) was an early French single-engine, single-seat aircraft.

Designed by Raymond Saulnier, the Monoplane was a mid-wing tractor configuration monoplane powered by a 50 hp Gnome Omega seven-cylinder rotary engine driving a two-bladed Chauvière Intégrale propeller. The fuselage was a rectangular-section wire-braced box girder, with the forward part covered in plywood and the rear part fabric covered: the rear section was left uncovered in some examples. The two-spar wings had elliptical ends and were braced by a pyramidal cabane in front of the pilot and an inverted V-strut underneath the fuselage, behind the undercarriage. Lateral control was effected by wing warping and the empennage consisted of a fixed horizontal stabiliser with tip-mounted full-chord elevators at either end and an aerodynamically balanced rudder, with no fixed vertical surface. In later examples the horizontal surfaces were modified, and consisted of a fixed surface with balanced elevators hinged to the trailing edge. The undercarriage consisted of a pair of short skids, each carried on a pair of struts, and a pair of wheels on a cross-axle bound to the skids by bungee cords, and a tailskid.

Manufactured by the Morane brothers and Gabriel Borel, the machine was flown by Eugen Wiencziers in the 11 June – 10 July 1911 Deutsche Rundflug, where he was the sixth biggest money winner, winning a total of 26,673 Mark out of the massive 442,606 Mark prize fund. The 1,854 km tour of northern Germany started and finished in Berlin-Johannisthal and visited twelve other towns. It was won by Benno König in an Albatros, and 8 of the 24 entrants completed the course.

The Monoplane achieved fame when Jules Védrines flew one to victory in the 1911 Paris-to-Madrid air race, the only competitor to finish the four-day course. Later in the year he came second in the Circuit of Britain, flying an aircraft powered by a 70 hp Gnome.

Emile Taddéoli in ~1911/13

Another was flown by André Frey in the Paris-Rome race in 1911, finishing third. Emile Taddéoli was another owner of a Morane monoplane.

A two-seat version was later produced, with the fuselage lengthened to 7.0 m (23 ft) and wingspan increased to 10 m (34 ft).

A two-seat version, powered by an 80 hp Gnome was entered for the 1912 British Military Aeroplane Competition.

Operators included the Argentine Air Force, Brazilian Naval Aviation, Romanian Air Corps, and the Royal Naval Air Service.

A Morane-Borel, acquired from Earl Daugherty, ended up as a display relic, at the Tallmantz Movieland of the Air (aka Intl Museum of Flight at Orange Co CA Airport) in the 1960s. Modified to some unknown extent—perhaps just renamed—as the Mathis-Mestach Exhibition Monoplane c.1911.

Mathis-Mestach Exhibition Monoplane

As of 2007 a single example remained extant, undergoing conservation work at the Canada Aviation Museum.

Gallery

Powerplant: 1 × Gnome Omega, 37 kW (50 hp)
Wingspan: 9.50 m (31 ft 1 in)
Wing area: 14 m2 (151 sq ft)
Length: 6.50 m (21 ft 6 in)
Empty weight: 200 kg (441 lb)
Gross weight: 430 kg (948 lb)
Maximum speed: 111 km/h (69 mph, 60 kn)
Crew: one

Morane-Saulnier MS.1500 Epervier

Flown for the first time on 12 May 1958, the prototype Morane-Saulnier M.S.1500.01 Epervier (sparrow-hawk) was a two-seat cantilever low-wing monoplane, with a high glazed canopy for its two-man crew. The Epervier was initially powered with a 400 shp Turbomeca Marcadau turboprop with which it logged 29 hr in 46 flights.

It was subsequently re-powered with an 800 shp / 522kW Turbomeca Bastan IV turboprop which first flew on 7 October 1958. Its fixed conventional landing gear had cantilever main legs.

Bastan power

By the end of February 1959 it had flown a further 37 hr in 58 flights.

The M.S.1500 was intended to meet an official Armee de I’Air requirement for a tactical reconnaissance and counter-insurgency aircraft for service in Algeria against the nationalist forces. A second prototype was built and tested, but no production orders were received.

Engine: 1 x 522kW Turbomeca Bastan IV turboprop
Max take-off weight: 2850 kg / 6283 lb
Wingspan: 13.06 m / 42 ft 10 in
Max. speed: 315 km/h / 196 mph

Morane-Saulnier Rallye 800 / MS.880 Rallye / MS.892 Commodore / MS.893 Rallye / SOCATA Rallye / Waco Minerva

Rallye 180GT

The Morane-Saulnier M.S.880, an all-metal low-wing monoplane with retractable landing gear, designed for a French Government competition seeking a popular everyman’s aircraft. It was first called the Ral¬lye 800, powered by a 90 horse Continental, at a price of US$5,750. It first flew on 10 June 1959 and was then produced in a number of variants.

The first French mass-produced all-metal light touring aircraft. The landing gear is a fixed tricycle, the cockpit has a large sliding canopy. Rectangular wings use a laminar flow airfoil. The entire leading edge is fitted with an automatically operating slats, each wing interconnected to prevent dissymmetry of lift. These open at slow speed and close at high speed. Wing flaps are manually controlled. Ailerons are fitted with automatic tabs. The Super Rallye and Rallye Commodore four seats and the Rallye Club two-three seats,

MS.890M

Engines have included:
Continental O-200-A, 100 hp
Continental O-300-A or -B, 145 hp
Potez 4 E 20, 105 hp
Potez 4 E 30, 115 hp

In 1965 the company became a subsidiary of Sud-Aviation, which in 1966 created its SOCATA lightplane subsidiary that became part of Aérospatiale. In 1979 the SOCATA product line was redesignated, and the Rallye series was renamed. Thus, the Rallye 110ST two-seat trainer with the 82-kW (110-hp) O-235-L2A engine, became the Galopin; the Rallye 180T glider tug with the 134-kW (180-hp) O-360-A3A became the Galerien, and the Rallye 235GT high-performance STOL four-seater with the O-540 became the Gabier with options of tricycle or tailwheel landing gear. These major models were complemented by other variants with Franklin or Rolls-Royce/Continental engines.

All models share basically the same airframe: corrosion-proofed monocoque fuselage, slotted Fowler flaps and automatic full-span leading edge slats.

MS.890M

The Rallye 235 was equipped with a non-steerable nose¬wheel. The automatic full span leading edge slats are a key to Rallye performance. They are out at takeoff; later on, they stow themselves. The slats promote smooth flow over the wing at low speeds and help maintain lateral con¬trol by giving the ailerons some breeze with which to work. They are not effective in lower¬ing stall speed, but they do increase the stall¬ing angle of attack, which combines with more effective lateral control to make operat¬ing the airplane with minimum margins more comfortable.

Almost 30 civil-standard Rallyes of various models were delivered for military use as trainers and liaison aircraft. R.235 Guerrier Based on the successful Rallye touring aircraft, the armed Guerrier can carry up to 340kg of stores on four underwing Alkan 663 pylons. Weapons options include machine-gun pods, rocket pods, light bombs, and flares. Also available is a surveillance pack containing a TV camera and transmitter for relaying images direct to ground units. Side-by-side seating and dual controls allow the aircraft to be used as a trainer, and a stretcher can be carried for casevac missions.

Customers (1987): Guerrier El Salvador 6, Rwanda 2, Senegal 4.

In France SOCATA flew the pro¬totype of an agricultural version of the Rallye on 16 May 1977. Designated Rallye 235 CA Agricole, it was avail¬able with a variety of dusting/ spraying equipment that could be removed easily for the aircraft to fly as a two seat lightplane when the spraying season was over.

Certification of the MS 880B and MS 885 came under Direction Generale L’Aviation Civile France 13, and the MS 893E and Rallye 235E under Direction Generale L’Aviation Civile France 22.

All the Rallyes were built, flown and certificated by French au¬thorities in Tarbes, France. Those destined for the U.S. are disassembled, their engines are pick¬led, and the airplanes are packaged, two to a ship container, and floated to Wilmington, North Carolina or Norfolk, Virginia. Rallye Air¬craft Corporation, an Aerospatiale subsidiary reassemble, finish and paint the airplanes. Each must then be cer¬tificated by the FAA.

Rallye Aircraft has taken a tricycle gear airplane and moved the third wheel from front to back. The new taildragger is the Rallye 235C, which, except for its landing gear and stick control, is a copy of the Rallye 235GT, a four place, canopy top touring machine pulled by 235 hp Lycoming. But the need for short landings usually comes in conjunction with rough, unpaved landing sites. The older Rallye, with its nose gear and small diameter mains, is only marginally suitable off pavement, whereas the 235C, with conventional wheel placement and large 8.00 x 6 main tires is more suitable. Control sticks are centered before each front seat, and the 235C has two throttles.

Waco Aircraft [2] was founded in 1966 to build SF.260 (as Waco Meteor), and Socata Rallye Commodore (as Waco Minerva).

Waco Minerva 220

French production of the Rallye series stopped in the 1970s and PZL took it over (as the PZL-110), along with all production licences.

Gallery

Rallye
Engine: Continental C-90, 90hp
Seats: 2
MTOW: 1,280 lb
Cruise: 115 mph
Endurance: 4 hr

MS.880B Club / Rallye 110 T
Engine: Continental O-200, 100 hp
Empty weight: 992 lb
MAUW: 1695 lb
Max speed: 121 mph
Cruise: 109 mph
Stall: 47 mph
ROC: 550 fpm
Seats: 2-3
Price 1964: $6988-$7684

MS.881 Rallye
Engine: Potez 4 E 20, 105 hp
Number built: 12

MS.883 Rallye
Engine: Lycoming, 115 hp
Number built: 77

MS.885 Super Rallye
Engine: Continental O-300C, 145 hp
Empty weight: 1100 lb
MAUW: 1875 lb
Max speed: 135 mph
Cruise: 124 mph
Stall: 51 mph
Seats: 3-4
Number built: 212

MS.886 Super Rallye
Engine: Lycoming O-320-E, 150 hp
Number built: 3

MS.890 Rallye Commodore
Engine: Continental O-300C, 145 hp
Empty weight: 1190 lb
MAUW: 2200 lb
Max speed: 133 mph
Cruise: 121 mph
Stall: 56 mph
ROC: 630 fpm
Seats: 4

MS.890M
Engine: 145hp
TO run: 390 ft
Ldg roll: 250 ft
ROC: 750 fpm
Cruise: 124 mph

110ST Galopin
Engine: Lycoming O-235-L2A, 112 hp
Cruise 65%: 85 kts
Max cruise: 128 mph / 111 kt
Endurance 65%: 4 hr 33 min
Stall: 46mph/40 kt
Useful load: 570 lbs
ROC: 542 fpm
T/O roll: 430 ft
Ldg roll: 290 ft

Rallye 150 GT
Engine: Lycoming O-320-E2A, 150 hp

150ST
Aerobatic
T/O roll: 420 ft
Ldg roll: 390 ft
Max X-wind: 20 kt

160ST
Aerobatic
T/O roll: 420 ft
Ldg roll: 390 ft
Stall: 51 mph/45 kt
Max cruise: 137 mph / 119 kt
ROC: 800 fpm

155SV Garnement
Engine: Lycoming O-320-D2A, 160 hp
Cruise 65%: 100 kts
Endurance 65%: 3 hr
Stall: 49-44 kt
Useful load: 720 lbs
ROC: 768 fpm.

180T Galerien
Engine: Lycoming O-360-A3A, 134-kW (180-hp)
Seats: 2
T/O roll: 380 ft
Ldg roll: 410 ft
Stall: 54 mph/ 48 kt
Max cruise: 140 mph / 122 kt
ROC: 890 fpm

180GT
Engine: Lycoming O-360-A2A, 180 hp
Wingspan: 31 ft 6.25 in / 9.61 m
Length: 23 ft 9 in / 7.24 m
Empty wt: 1257 lb / 570 kg
MTOW: 2315 lb / 1050 kg
Fuel cap: 48 Imp. Gal
Max ldg wt: 2305 lb
Max cruise 75% 5000ft/1525m: 139 mph / 121 kt / 224 kph
T/O roll: 445 ft
Ldg roll: 410 ft
Stall: 57 mph/ 50 kt
ROC: 787 fpm / 240 m/min
Service ceiling: 11,150 ft / 3400 m
Range: 512 nm / 590 mi / 950 km
Max X-wind: 20 kt
Cabin length: 7 ft 4 in / 2.25 m
Cabin width: 3 ft 8.5 in / 1.13 m
Seats: 4

Rallye 125
1972
Engine: Lycoming O-235-F2A, 125 hp
Seats: 4

Rallye 220 GT
Engine: Franklin 6A-350-C1, 220 hp

Rallye 235C
Engine: Lycoming O 540 B4B5, 235 hp
TBO: 2,000 hrs
Prop: 2 blade, constant speed
Length: 24 ft
Wingspan: 32 ft
Wing area: 132 sq.ft
Height: 7 ft 7 in
Max takeoff weight: 2,645 lbs
Standard empty weight: 1,466 lbs
Max useful load: 1,179 lbs
Wing loading: 20 lb/sq.ft
Power loading: 11.3 lb/hp
Max usable fuel: 65 USG/390 lb
Max rate of climb, sea level: 970 fpm
Max rate of climb, 8,000 feet: 4155 fpm
Max operating attitude: 14,800 ft
Max speed (sea level): 148 kts
Cruise, 65 % power at 8,000 ft: 125 kts
Fuel flow at 65 % power: 12.9USG/hr
Endurance at 65% power, no res: 5 hrs
Stalling speed, clean: 59 kts
Stalling speed, flaps down: 54 kts
Max ramp weight: 2645 lbs
Turbulent air penetration speed: 113 kts

R.235 Guerrier

R.235GT Gabier
Engine: Lycoming O 540 B4B5, 235 hp
TBO: 2,000 hrs
Prop: 2 blade, constant speed, 80 in. dia.
Length: 23 ft. 9 in
Height: 9 ft. 2 in
Wingspan: 31 ft. 11 in
Wing area: 132 sq. ft
Wing loading: 20 lb/sq.ft
Power loading: 11.2 lb/hp
Seats: 4
Empty wt: 1,568 lb
Useful load: 1,072 lbs
Payload with full fuel: 622 lbs
Gross wt: 2,640 lbs
Usable fuel cap: 71 USG/426 lbs
Maximum rate of climb: 970 fpm
Service ceiling: 14,800 ft
Maximum speed: 148 kts
Max cruise, 75 % pwr at 6,000 ft: 131 kts
Econ cruise 65 % pwr at 10,000 ft: 127 kts
Duration at max cruise: 5.4 hrs
Duration at econ cruise: 6.2 hrs
Stalling speed, clean: 59 kts
Stalling speed, full flaps: 56 kts
T/O roll: 490 ft
Ldg roll: 425 ft
Max X-wind: 25 kt

MS.893E Rallye 108GT
Engine: Lycoming, 180 hp
Prop: CSU
Seats: 4

Waco Minerva 220
Engine: Franklin, 220 hp
Seats: 4

MS.890M
Rallye 220GT

Morane-Saulnier MS.760 Paris

In January 1953 Morane-Saulnier flew the prototype M.S.755 Fleuret, a two-seat jet trainer which competed with the Fouga Magister for an air force order. The Fleuret lost the competition, but its design formed the basis of the Morane-Saulnier M.S.760 Paris which, designed primarily as a high-speed liaison aircraft, can be considered as a forerunner of the executive jet. Morane-Saulnier developed the Fleuret into a four seat light communications aircraft by enlarging the cabin, increasing the internal fuel capacity and strengthening the airframe.

Morane-Saulnier MS.760 Paris Article

The Turboméca Mabore II powered first prototype, MS.760-01 F WGVO (then F-BGVO), was flown on 29 July 1954, and interest shown by the French military authorities resulted in orders for 50 for the air force and navy on 18 July 1956, the initial production example designated M.S.760A, flying on 27 February 1958. Fitted with tip tanks, this type was delivered as the Paris IR to the Armée de l’Air and the Aeronavale.

Two basic models will be manufactured in series. The MS 760A Paris I (one hundred and fifty built), and MS 760B Paris II (sixty-three built). The dates of the first flight respectively, February 27, 1958 and December 12, 1960.

Orders were received for 109 civil and military use, 12 MS.760A sets of components were supplied to Argentina for assembly at the Fabrica Militar de Aviones (FMA) factory in Cordoba, followed by production of 36 more. The 760 MS was purchased by Argentina in May 1957. Forty-eight Paris were operated by the Fabrica Militar de Aviones Cordoba. The first shipped to Argentina was Paris I No. 3, on 1 May 1958. By February 1959, twenty-six complete aircraft had crossed the Atlantic in separate shipments.

MS 760 of Argentina

Brazil acquired 30 for liaison, photographic survey and training. A first order of eight Paris II for Brazil was signed February 19, 1960 with twenty other options. In total, Brazil assembled forty-eight Paris II, mainly for the Air Force.

The first Paris was delivered to the Air Force as a training and liaison aircraft on 27 February 1958. The Naval Aviation were to receive a small number for the same missions as the Air Force. On a training mission, it can be armed with two 7.5mm machine guns plus four rockets or two bombs of 50 kg fixed under the wing.

At the end of 1958 the College of Aeronautics, Cranfield, received an MS.760 (No. 8) for practical demonstrations. Two were sold in the U.S., and one in Iran (delivered on 15 July.1958).

The initial production version was superseded in 1961 by the M.S.760B Paris II with 10581bst / 480kg thrust Marbore VI turbojets and various systems improvements and integral fuel tanks in wing leading edges.

When production ended in 1964 a total of 156 aircraft of the two series had been built, including 48 assembled in Argentina.

In 1969, four MS 760A were registered in France and many 760B, one registered in Italy and seven in Holland. Seven Paris II were purchased to train airline pilots at the Eelde school in Holland, the first being delivered September 14, 1962.

The final version was the 1963 Marbore VI-powered M.S.760C Paris III, with an enlarged wing but without tip tanks, plus increased fuel in a redesigned fully integral cabin fuselage accommodating five or six passengers, and a car-type door on port side instead of a sliding canopy. It was also fitted with an air system for cabin and pressurisation bled from the turbojet (SEMCA automatic air-conditionning system). The sole prototype, F WLKL, flew for the first time on 28 February 1964 but the variant did not find favour as a business jet and proceeded no further. Only one aircraft built, F-BLKL.

Paris III F-BLKL / 366 (cn 01)

A total of 109 MS.760A Paris I, 10 MS.760B Paris II and 1 MS.760C Paris III were built.
For replacement, Argentina selected the FMA Pampa jet trainer, while France chose the TBM700 turboprop.

Gallery

MS.760A Paris I
Engines: 2 x Turbomeca Marbore IIC turbojets, 400kg
Wing span: 33 ft 4 in (10.15 m)
Overall length: 33.58 ft (10.2 m)
Height: 8 ft 6 in (2.6 m)
Wing area: 193.7 sq.ft (18 sq.m)
Wing aspect ratio: 5.12
Empty wt: 4280 lb (1943 kg)
Normal T/O wt: 6320 lb (2869 kg)
MTOW: 7650 lb (3473 kg)
Internal fuel cap: 205 Imp.Gal. (931 lt)
External fuel cap: 99 Imp.Gal. (450 lt)
Wing loading: 34.7 lb/sq.ft (169 kg/sq.m)
Pwr loading: 3.6 lb/lbst (3.6 kg/kgst)
Max speed: 397 mph (638 kph)
Initial ROC: 2885 fpm (14.7 m/sec)
TO dist 50 ft: 2800 ft (854 m)
Range: 710 sm (1139 km).
Ceiling: 10000 m / 32800 ft

MS 760B Paris II
Engines: 2 x Turbomeca Marboré VI, 480 kgf

Paris III

MS.755 Fleuret

Two French companies, Fouga and Morane Saulnier, saw a market for such a basic jet trainer and realised the potential of the Turbomeca engines for this application. Fouga presented a proposal for a tandem two seat trainer to the French Air Ministry, the CM.130R, which was powered by two 353 lbst (160kgst) Palas engines. The design was refined and a contract for three of the resulting twin Marbore II powered CM.170R aircraft was placed with Fouga in December 1950. The Morane Saulnier company were working along similar lines at this time, and their drawing boards brought the MS.755 Fleuret. It was designed under the direction of engineer Paul-René Gauthier, who was then director of Morane-Saulnier engineering department.

It was an all-metal mid-wing cantilever monoplane with a T-type tail. The MS.755 Fleuret featured side by side seating, the wing was set slightly lower on the fuselage and had a lower aspect ratio, the tail surfaces were conventional and the two Turbomeca Marbore II turbojet engines were faired more into the fuselage than the semi podded arrangement evident on the Magister. Air intakes were located in the wing roots. The two pilots seats were attached to an aerodynamically balanced trap in the fuselage, which operated following jettison of a hatch in the underbelly in an emergency and ejected the two occupants through the floor of the cockpit.

The construction of two prototypes was launched at the same time. Cn 01 (F-ZWRS) began its taxi tests in January 1953 (while its competitor, the Fouga Magister, made its first flight on July 23, 1952). The MS-755 made its maiden flight on 26 January 1953, with Morane-Saulnier chief test pilot Jean Cliquet at the controls, accompanied by flight engineer Ferdinand Naudy. Jean Cliquet took off from Melun-Villaroche for a 15 minute flight. The aircraft did not exceed the altitude of 800-900 m considered a limited ceiling. Two other flights were made the next day. On January 31, a flight was performed with the commander Grigaut (Head of Bretigny AB. *Flight Test Center (CEAM)). February 12 was the official flight presentation of the aircraft to President Robert Morane and the executive committee.

On 30 April 1953, the aircraft is delivred to Bretigny Flight Test Center for official qualifying tests. At that time 57 flights and almost 35 hours of flights have been made.

After stopping the program, Cn 02 was converted into four-seater as the MS-760 01.

After evaluating the merits of both aircraft, the French Air Force expressed a preference for tandem seating, and in 1953 placed an initial order for ten pre production and 95 production CM.170R Magister aircraft.

The initial success of the Magister was not lost on Morane¬Saulnier, who decided not to compete head on and thus developed the Fleuret into a four seat light communications aircraft by enlarging the cabin, increasing the internal fuel capacity and strengthening the airframe. This became the MS.760 Paris.

Gallery

Engines: 2 x Turbomeca Mabores
Wing span: 33ft (10m)
Overall length: 31.83ft (9.7m)
Height: 8.92 ft (2.7 m)
Wing area: 193.7 sq.ft (18 sq.m)
Wing aspect ratio: 5.12
Empty wt: 4190 lb (1902 kg)
Normal T/O wt: 5830 lb (2646 kg)
MTOW: 6710 lb (3046 kg)
Internal fuel cap: 150 Imp.Gal. (681 lt)
External fuel cap: 55 Imp.Gal. (250 lt)
Wing loading: 30.1 lb/sq.ft (147 kg/sq.m)
Pwr loading: 3.3 lb/lbst (3.3 kg/kgst)
Max speed: 446 mph (717 kph)
Initial ROC: 3350 fpm (17 m/sec)
TO dist 50 ft: 2400 ft (732 m)
Range: 435 sm (698 km)

Morane-Saulnier MS.730 / MS.731 / MS.732 / MS.733 Alcyon

Development of the Morane-Saulnier M.S.733 Alcyon (Kingfisher) basic trainer began with the M.S.730.01 prototype, which flew for the first time on 11 August 1949. With the original 134kW Mathis 8G.20 inverted V-8 engine replaced by a 179kW Argus As 10, the prototype flew again in November that year as the M.S.731.

Morane-Saulnier Alcyon Article

Morane-Saulnier MS-733 Alcyon

Two M.S.732 prototypes were flight tested in early 1951, each of them powered by a Potez 6D.30 engine and having the previous cantilever fixed landing gear replaced by a new design in which the main units retracted. The first example of the definitive version flew on 16 April 1951 as the M.S.733.01; five pre-production aircraft followed and series aircraft totalled 200; 40 for the French navy, 15 for Cambodia, and the balance for service with the Armee de I’Air as the Alcyon, 70 of them being fitted with machine-gun armament for use as gunnery trainers. In 1956 some of the gunnery trainers were converted for counter-insurgency duties, with machine-gun and anti-personnel bomb armament, for use against the nationalist rebels in Algeria. These aircraft were redesignated M.S.733A, of which a number were sold later to Morocco.

Gallery

M.S.730.01
Engine: 134kW Mathis 8G.20

M.S.731
Engine: 1 x 179kW Argus As 10

M.S.732
Engine: 1 x Potez 6D.30, 179kW/ 237 hp

MS.733
Engine: 1 x Potez 6D.30 inverted inline, 179kW/ 237 hp
Max take-off weight: 1670 kg / 3682 lb
Empty weight: 1260 kg / 2778 lb
Wingspan: 11.28 m / 37 ft 0 in
Length: 9.32 m / 30 ft 7 in
Height: 2.42 m / 7 ft 11 in
Wing area: 21.90 sq.m / 235.73 sq ft
Max. speed: 260 km/h / 162 mph
Ceiling: 4800 m / 15750 ft
Range: 497 nm / 920 km / 572 miles
Wing loading: 15.58 lb/sq.ft / 76.00 kg/sq.m
Crew: 2
Payload: 1-2 Pax