The Voisin L was a pusher biplane developed for the French Army's 1912 trials[1] where it performed successfully. About 70 were built in France[2] with around 400 manufactured under license in the Russian Empire.[3] The aircraft was the first in a series of military pusher biplanes from Voisin all of which had similar design characteristics.[1] During the early stages of World War I the aircraft were primarily used for reconnaissance.
The Voisin L was the only rotary engine powered aircraft designed by Gabriel Voisin. The official French military designation for aircraft powered by the Rhône 9C was the Voisin I while those fitted with the Gnome Monosoupape 7A were designated as the Voisin II. The rotary engine on the Voisin L drove a large two bladed wooden propeller via a reduction gearbox.[4]
Design
The Voisin L had equal-span wings with no dihedral. A cruciform tail was attached to the wings with booms. A streamlined nacelle carried a pilot and observer in front with a single rotary engine at the rear.[1] Steel tubing was used throughout the structure making the Voisin-L a robust aircraft for its time-period.[5]
Land-based versions of the aircraft featured a distinctive quadricycle landing gear. A floatplane version was produced with the quadricycle landing gear replaced with three flat bottomed pontoons.[1]
Voisin-Ls can be identified as they are the only model fitted with air-cooled rotary engines and so lacked the bulky radiators seen on later Voisin pushers which were powered by water-cooled Salmson 9, Peugeot 8Aa and Renault 12Fe aero-engines.[6]
Operational history
At the start of World War I, Voisin L aircraft (types 1 and 2) were in service with four French squadrons. The aircraft were used for artillery observation and as daylight bombers.[5] Voisin-Ls were in front line service till 1915 when the French airforce was reorganized with production focused on a smaller number of dedicated types. One of the types selected for mass production was the Voisin III.[7]
Type 2,Voisin II or Voisin-Gnome - Fitted with a Gnome rotary engine.[1][6][4] Early examples were fitted with the Gnome Omega. Later examples used the seven-cylinder variant of the Gnome Monosoupape.[4]
Type 1 and 2 are designations applied retrospectively.[6] Contemporary names for the aircraft included the Voisin model 1912[1] and Voisin 13.5 meter.[10] In all cases Voisin L was the aircraft's factory designation.[1][4]
^ abcdefghSimons, Graham M (2019). "Hydro avions". Early French Aviation (1905-1930). Pen and Sword. ISBN9781526758750.
^Davilla, James J; Soltan, Arthur M (2002). French aircraft of the First World War. Flying Machines Press. p. 542. ISBN9781891268090.
^ abBlume, August G (2010). The Russian Military Air Fleet in World War I. Vol. 1 - A chronology 1910-1917. United States: Schiffer. pp. 297–298. ISBN978-0764333514.
^ abcdePinto, Renato (1981). "Voisin L". Perfiles Historia De La Aviacion [History of aviation] (in Spanish). Vol. 1. Spain: Viscontea. pp. 65–72.
^Sumner, Ian (2015). The Kings of the Air: French Aces and Airmen of the Great War. Pen and Sword. p. 41. ISBN9781783463381.
^ abRobinson, Antony (1979). "Wings for the Tzar". The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aviation. Vol. 1. United Kingdom: Marschal Cavendish. p. 57. ISBN085685574X.
^Kulikov, Victor (2013). "Aces of the 9th AOI". Russian Aces of World War 1. United Kingdom: Osprey Publishing Limited. ISBN9781780960609.
^Opdycke, Leonard E (1999). French Aeroplanes before the Great War. United States: Schiffer Military History. p. 271. ISBN0764307525.
^"Naval and Military Aeronautics". The Aeroplane. United Kingdom. 22 January 1914. p. 86.
^Taylor, John W. R. (1969). Combat aircraft of the world: from 1909 to the present. United Kingdom: Putnam. p. 131. LCCN68-25459.