Bloch MB.200

MB.200
Role Bomber
Manufacturer Societé des Avions Marcel Bloch
Introduction 1935
Primary users French Air Force
Czechoslovak Air Force
Bulgarian Air Force
Luftwaffe
Produced 1933-1939
Number built 332


Aero MB 200

The MB.200 was a French bomber aircraft of the 1930s designed and built by Societé des Avions Marcel Bloch. A twin-engined high-winged monoplane with a fixed undercarriage, over 200 MB.200s were built for the French Air Force, and the type was also licence built by Czechoslovakia, but it soon became obsolete, and was largely phased out by the start of the Second World War.

Development and design

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.[1]

The first of three prototypes flew on 26 June 1933.[1][2] As one of the winning designs for the competition, (the other was the larger Farman F.221),[1] an initial order for 30 MB.200s was placed on 1 January 1934,[2] entering service late in that year. Further orders followed, and the MB.200 equipped 12 French squadrons by the end of 1935.[1] 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.[3]

Operational history

Czechoslovakia chose the MB.200 as part of a modernisation program for its air force of the mid-1930s. Although at the rate of aircraft development at that time, the MB.200 would quickly become obsolete, the Czechoslovakians needed a quick solution involving the license production of a proven design, as their own aircraft industry did not have sufficient development experience with such a large aircraft, or with all-metal airframes and stressed-skin construction, placing an initial order for 74 aircraft. After some delays, both Aero and Avia began license-production in 1937, with a total of about 124 built.[1] Czechoslovakian MB.200s were basically similar to their French counterparts, with differences in defensive armament and other equipment.

The gradual German conquest of Czechoslovakia meant that MB.200s eventually passed under their control, including aircraft that were still coming off the production line. As well as serving in the German Luftwaffe, some bombers were distributed to Bulgaria.

Vichy France deployed a squadron of MB.200s against the Allied invasion of Lebanon and Syria in 1941, carrying out at least one daylight bombing mission against British shipping.[4][5]

Variants

MB.200.01
single prototype -
MB.200B.4
main production version - 2x Gnome-Rhône 14Kirs
MB.201
two Hispano-Suiza 12Ybrs engines[6]
MB.202
four Gnome-Rhône 7Kdrs engines[6]
MB.203
two Clerget 14F diesel engines[6]

Operators

Aero MB.200, Bulgarian Air Force, 1941
 Bulgaria
Bulgarian Air Force - Purchased 12 ex-Czech MB.200s from Germany in 1939, using them as trainers.[7]
 Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovak Air Force
 France
Armée de l'Air (from 1935)
 Germany
Luftwaffe (captured)
Spain Spain
Spanish Republican Air Force received at least one aircraft.[8]

Specifications (MB.200B.4)

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Taylor 1981, p.23.
  2. 1 2 "Military Bloch aircraft : MB 200". Dassault Aviation. Retrieved 23 August 2008.
  3. Angelucci 1981, p.155.
  4. Shores and Ehrengardt Air Pictorial July 1970, p. 245.
  5. Shores and Ehrengardt Air Pictorial August 1970, p.284.
  6. 1 2 3 http://www.dassault-aviation.com/fr/passion/avions/bloch-militaires/mb-200.html
  7. Green and Swanborough 1989, pp65-66.
  8. BLOCH 200/210 Archived March 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
Bibliography

External links

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