Fauvel AV.31
Role Flying wing
National origin France
Designer Charles Fauvel
First flight none
Number built 0

The Fauvel AV.31 was a design for a French flying wing airliner conceived by Charles Fauvel in the early 1940s.

Design and development

The AV.31 was a giant transport plane with a wingspan of 295 feet (90 meters) and a take-off weight of 200 tonnes. All the passengers, fuel, and engines were situated in the wing, reducing the cockpit to a small nacelle in front of the wing. The passenger cabin, fully submerged in the wing, was 27 m long and 9 m wide, and could accommodate a variety of layouts. A bomber version was proposed as the AV.32.[1]

To test the flight characteristics of the AV.31, Charles Fauvel proposed a 1/3 scale flying model, which would have been propelled by four 250 hp "Béarn" engines and had a span of 104 feet (32 m), a take-off weight of 8150 kg, and maximum speed of 354 km/h.

The AV.31, despite its great potential, did not leave the drawing board.

References

  1. "Charles Fauvel and his Flying Wings".

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

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