CAMS 30

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CAMS 30
CAMS 30E 2 1923 02.png
CAMS 33E
Type: Flying boat
Design country:
Manufacturer:

Chantiers Aéro-Maritimes de la Seine (CAMS)

First flight:

1922

Commissioning:

1922

Production time:

from 1922

Number of pieces:

33 + 1 prototype

The CAMS 30 was a two-seat, single-engine flying boat manufactured in France in the early 1920s.

history

It was the first flying boat that the Italian Raffaele Conflenti (1889-1946) developed for the French aviation company Chantiers Aéro-Maritimes de la Seine (short: CAMS). Conflenti previously worked for Società Idrovolanti Alta Italia (SIAI).

The CAMS Series 30E was a biplane and was used as a training flying boat. The prototype was presented at the Salon de l'Aéronautique in Paris in 1922 . The positive development of the type led to several orders. 22 machines alone were ordered for the French military. Seven aircraft were exported to Yugoslavia and four to Poland .

The version for general aviation had the designation CAMS 30T and two additional passenger seats. In August 1924, the works pilot Ernest Burri started a world tour with this machine and set a speed record for passenger seaplanes. The exact number of CAMS 30T produced is not known.

variants

CAMS 33T
  • CAMS 30E: (1922) two-seat military training flying boat
  • CAMS 31: (1922) single-seat prototype with Hispano-Suiza 8Fb engine; it served as the starting model for the later built CAMS 31P (mail flying boat)
  • CAMS 30T: (1924) Passenger version of the CAMS 30E with two additional seats

Trainer version data

crew 2 (student pilot and instructor)
length 9.28 m
span 12.40 m
height 3.12 m
Wing area 43.0 m²
Empty mass 885 kg
Takeoff mass 1180 kg
Engine 1 × Hispano-Suiza 8A , output 112 kW (approx. 150 PS) with four-blade pusher propeller
Cruising speed ~ 153 km / h

literature

  • Michael JH Taylor (Ed.): Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. Jane's Publishing Company, London 1989, ISBN 1-85170-324-1

Web links

Commons : CAMS 30  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation, p. 225