PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Bloch MB.200
rdfs:comment
  • The MB.200 was the only bomber available to the Czechoslovak Air Force when Germany invaded in 1938. Although the Germans had superior air craft, the Czech bombers were still able to undergo bombing missions inside Germany, against German cities in retaliation for the bombing of Czech cities.
  • The Bloch MB.200 was designed in response to a 1932 requirement for a new day/night bomber to equip the French Air Force. It was a high-winged all-metal cantilever monoplane, with a slab-sided fuselage, powered by two Gnome & Rhône 14Kirs radial engines. It had a fixed tailwheel undercarriage and featured an enclosed cockpit for the pilots. Defensive machine guns were in nose and dorsal gun turrets and an under fuselage gondola.
owl:sameAs
empty weight kg
  • 4300
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:turtledove/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
range km
  • 1000
Guns
  • 3
Produced
  • 1933
eng1 type
  • 14
primary user
Type
eng1 kW
  • 649
height m
  • 3.900000
bombs
  • of bombs
span m
  • 22.450000
climb rate ms
  • 4.330000
Manufacturer
max speed kmh
  • 285
ceiling m
  • 8000
length m
  • 16
more users
max takeoff weight kg
  • 7480
wing area sqm
  • 62.500000
prime units?
  • met
Crew
  • 4
Introduction
  • 1935
Number Built
  • 332
eng1 name
eng1 number
  • 2
abstract
  • The MB.200 was the only bomber available to the Czechoslovak Air Force when Germany invaded in 1938. Although the Germans had superior air craft, the Czech bombers were still able to undergo bombing missions inside Germany, against German cities in retaliation for the bombing of Czech cities.
  • The Bloch MB.200 was designed in response to a 1932 requirement for a new day/night bomber to equip the French Air Force. It was a high-winged all-metal cantilever monoplane, with a slab-sided fuselage, powered by two Gnome & Rhône 14Kirs radial engines. It had a fixed tailwheel undercarriage and featured an enclosed cockpit for the pilots. Defensive machine guns were in nose and dorsal gun turrets and an under fuselage gondola. The first of three prototypes flew on 26 June 1933. As one of the winning designs for the competition, (the other was the larger Farman F.221), an initial order for 30 MB.200s was placed on 1 January 1934, entering service late in that year. Further orders followed, and the MB.200 equipped 12 French squadrons by the end of 1935. Production in France totalled over 208 aircraft (4 by Bloch, 19 by Breguet, 19 by Loire, 45 by Hanriot, 10 by SNCASO and 111 by Potez.
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