PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • FBA 17
rdfs:comment
  • {| |} The FBA 17 was a training flying boat produced in France in the 1920s. Similar in general layout to the aircraft that FBA had produced during World War I, the Type 17 was a conventional two-bay biplane with unequal-span, unstaggered wings and side-by-side open cockpits. The pusher engine was mounted on struts in the interplane gap. Apart from their use by the French Navy, a small number were sold to the Polish Navy, the Brazilian Air Force, and civil operators as well. Some versions were built as amphibians, and others had fittings to allow them to be catapulted from warships.
owl:sameAs
empty weight kg
  • 850
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
range km
  • 360
ceiling ft
  • 9840
met or eng?
  • met
range miles
  • 220
eng1 type
  • Hispano-Suiza 8Ac
gross weight kg
  • 1125
length in
  • 4
Type
  • Flying boat trainer
eng1 kW
  • 134
wing area sqft
  • 393
height m
  • 3.200000
Height in
  • 6
span m
  • 12.870000
Manufacturer
max speed kmh
  • 150
empty weight lb
  • 1875
ceiling m
  • 3000
length m
  • 8.940000
max speed mph
  • 90
length ft
  • 29
Height ft
  • 10
First Flight
  • April
span ft
  • 42
gross weight lb
  • 2480
span in
  • 3
wing area sqm
  • 36.500000
Crew
  • Two, pilot and instructor
Number Built
  • >300
eng1 hp
  • 180
Designer
eng1 number
  • 1
abstract
  • {| |} The FBA 17 was a training flying boat produced in France in the 1920s. Similar in general layout to the aircraft that FBA had produced during World War I, the Type 17 was a conventional two-bay biplane with unequal-span, unstaggered wings and side-by-side open cockpits. The pusher engine was mounted on struts in the interplane gap. Apart from their use by the French Navy, a small number were sold to the Polish Navy, the Brazilian Air Force, and civil operators as well. Some versions were built as amphibians, and others had fittings to allow them to be catapulted from warships. In 1931, the US Coast Guard purchased an example for evaluation, and being pleased with the design, arranged for the type to be built under licence by the Viking Flying Boat Company in New Haven, Connecticut. Six aircraft were eventually produced and served with the Coast Guard under the designation OO until the outbreak of World War II.