The Nieuport-Delage NiD 580 R.2 was a contender for a French government contract for a long range, two seat reconnaissance aircraft, issued in 1928. There were eight prototypes in the 1931-2 contest and the NiD 580 was not selected for production.
The engine was mounted in the nose, enclosed in a close fitting cowling which followed the profiles of the two cylinder banks and with its radiator in a long NACA fairing on the cowling below the engine.[1][3] The fuselage, built around four longerons, had an equilateral triangular section, vertex down. The pilot's cockpit near the trailing edge gave him a forward view under the wing. The observer/gunner had a separate cockpit close behind the pilot and a rounded wing cut-out improved the upward field of view from both. Both cockpits had unusual, extensive, multiframed windscreens and the observer's at least could be folded. His position was fitted with a flexible machine gun mounting.[1]
The NiD 580's angular empennage was conventional, with a straight-tapered tailplane and elevators mounted on top of the fuselage. The fin was triangular and carried a nearly rectangular rudder, hinged behind the elevators, above the keel. It had a fixed, conventional undercarriage with mainwheels on axles at the vertices of faired V-struts hinged on the fuselage at the ends of the wing struts. On each side, a shock-absorbing leg was mounted on the forward wing strut at a point strengthened by two short struts, one to the upper fuselage longeron and one to the rear wing strut mounting point.[1][3]
Development
The French government purchased two NiD 580s, as they did with the other prototypes.[4] The date of the first flight is not known but both flew during the trials.[5] The S.T.I.Aé Concours des avions de grande reconnaissance (Long range reconnaissance aircraft competition) at Villacoublay had begun in April 1931[2] and, unusually, lasted about a year. The winner was the ANF Les Mureaux 111,[6] so the Nieuport-Delage did not go into production.
Despite this lack of success, the NiD 580 was on display at the 18th Paris Aero Salon, held in November–December 1932.[3]