Macchi M.14

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Macchi M.14
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Role Fighter
National origin Italy
Manufacturer Macchi
Designer Alessandro Tonini
First flight 1918
Introduction 1919
Primary user Italy
Number built 11

The Macchi M.14 was an Italian fighter of 1918 designed and manufactured by Macchi. The M.14 was the first non-seaplane fighter Macchi produced, its previous fighter production having focused on flying boat fighters.[1]

Design and development

Alessandro Tonini designed the M.14, which was a single-seat wooden sesquiplane with Warren truss interplane bracing and armed with two fixed, forward-firing 7.7-millimeter (0.303-inch) Vickers machine guns synchronized to fire through the propeller. It had fixed, tailskid landing gear, and its 82-kilowatt (110-horsepower) Le Rhône 9J nine-cylinder rotary engine drove a two-bladed tractor propeller.[2]

Operational history

Company testing of the M.14 prototype began in the spring of 1918. It was destroyed in June 1918, but Macchi then constructed 10 production aircraft, which underwent official evaluation at Guidonia Montecelio in 1919. Although no additional M.14s were ordered, the 10 aircraft saw service as advanced trainers. At last one of them is known to have become a civilian aircraft with the civil registration I-BADG.[3]

Operators

 Kingdom of Italy

Specifications

Data from Green, William, and Gordon Swanborough The Complete Book of Fighters: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Every Fighter Aircraft Built and Flown, New York: SMITHMARK Publishers, 1994, ISBN 0-8317-3939-8

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 5.65 m (18 ft 6½ in)
  • Wingspan: 8.20 m (26 ft 10.8 in)
  • Height: 2.62 m (8 ft 7⅛ in)
  • Wing area: 16.60 m2 (178.69 ft2)
  • Empty weight: 440 kg (970 lb)
  • Gross weight: 640 kg (1,411 lb)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Le Rhône 9J nine-cylinder rotary, 82 kW (110 hp) each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 182 km/h (113 mph)
  • Endurance: 2 hours

Armament

Notes:

  • Time to 1,000 m (3,281 ft): 3 min 30 sec
  • Maximum speed figure is at sea level

See also

Related lists

Notes

  1. Green and Swanborough, pp. 357.
  2. Green and Swanborough, pp. 357.
  3. Green and Swanborough, p. 357.

References

  • Green, William, and Gordon Swanborough. The Complete Book of Fighters: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Every Fighter Aircraft Built and Flown. New York: SMITHMARK Publishers, 1994. ISBN 0-8317-3939-8.