PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Gourdou-Leseurre GL.2
rdfs:comment
  • {| |} The Gourdou-Leseurre GL.2 (originally, the Gourdou-Leseurre Type B) was a French fighter which made its maiden flight in 1918. It was a development of the Gourdou-Leseurre Type A which had shown pleasing performance during testing but which had been ultimately rejected by the Aéronautique Militaire due to concerns about the rigidity of the wing. The Type B featured not only a new wing design, now braced by four struts on either side in place of the two per side on the Type A, but also a revised fin and rudder for improved directional stability, and strengthened undercarriage. Twenty examples were delivered in November 1918, designated GL.2C.1 in service, but the end of the war meant a loss of official interest.
owl:sameAs
empty weight kg
  • 590
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
range km
  • 450
ceiling ft
  • 24600
climb rate ftmin
  • 940
met or eng?
  • met
range miles
  • 280
eng1 type
  • Hispano-Suiza 8Ab
gross weight kg
  • 880
length in
  • 4
primary user
  • French Air Force and Navy
Type
  • Fighter
eng1 kW
  • 134
wing area sqft
  • 198
height m
  • 2.520000
Height in
  • 4
span m
  • 9.400000
climb rate ms
  • 4.800000
Manufacturer
max speed kmh
  • 257
empty weight lb
  • 1800
ceiling m
  • 7500
length m
  • 6.500000
max speed mph
  • 153
length ft
  • 21
Height ft
  • 8
more users
span ft
  • 30
gross weight lb
  • 1940
span in
  • 10
wing area sqm
  • 18.400000
Crew
  • One pilot
Armament
  • 2
eng1 hp
  • 180
eng1 number
  • 1
abstract
  • {| |} The Gourdou-Leseurre GL.2 (originally, the Gourdou-Leseurre Type B) was a French fighter which made its maiden flight in 1918. It was a development of the Gourdou-Leseurre Type A which had shown pleasing performance during testing but which had been ultimately rejected by the Aéronautique Militaire due to concerns about the rigidity of the wing. The Type B featured not only a new wing design, now braced by four struts on either side in place of the two per side on the Type A, but also a revised fin and rudder for improved directional stability, and strengthened undercarriage. Twenty examples were delivered in November 1918, designated GL.2C.1 in service, but the end of the war meant a loss of official interest. Gourdou-Leseurre continued development anyway, and by 1920 had an improved version, designated GL.21 or B2 ready for exhibition at the Paris Salon de l'Aéronautique that year. This differed from the GL.2 mostly in having revised ailerons and a batch of twenty were purchased by the Aéronautique Militaire as the, with another one being purchased by Finland for evaluation. Two years later, a further revision of the design appeared as the GL.22 or B3. This featured a redesigned wing of greater span, and modified horizontal stabiliser and landing gear. This proved to be a moderate success for Gourdou-Leseurre, selling to the Aéronautique Maritime as the GL.22C.1, as well as Finland, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Latvia, and Yugoslavia. This was followed by a small series of test aircraft designated GL.23 or B4 before manufacture of the GL.22 resumed in an unarmed version known internally to the company as the B5 and purchased by both the Aéronautique Militaire and Aéronautique Maritime as the GL.22ET.1 for use as an advanced trainer (Ecole de Transition). One of these aircraft was used for trials aboard the aircraft carrier Béarn. The GL.24 version was produced in small numbers in 1925 for various trial purposes, including one two-seat trainer conversion, and one air ambulance (TS - Transport Sanitaire) exhibited at an international medical conference held in Paris that year. The GL.2 was also used as a display aircraft, with Gourdou-Leseurre test pilot André Christiany flying one to win the speed trial in the 1923 Coupe Michelin, and two ET.1s painted in the tricolore giving displays throughout France and North Africa the same year. Even well into the 1930s, specialised aerobatic versions were produced as the B6 and B7 for Jérôme Cavalli and Fernand Malinvaud respectively, with a second B7 built for Adrienne Bolland.