Nieuport-Delage NiD 39

NiD 39
Role Airliner
National origin France
Manufacturer Nieuport-Delage
First flight 1927
Introduction Compagnie Aérienne Française
Number built 33


The Nieuport-Delage NiD 39 was an airliner produced in France in the late 1920s, developed from the NiD 38.[1][2] The airline Compagnie Aérienne Française had purchased four examples of the previous aircraft and ordered an improved version with greater passenger capacity from the manufacturer. Like its predecessor, the NiD 39 was a single-bay biplane of conventional design with an enclosed cabin its passengers and an open cockpit for the pilot. However, while the NiD 38 could only carry two passengers, the NiD 39 could carry four.[2] CAF also specified the engine to be used – the Armstrong Siddeley Lynx – although the first eight examples produced flew with the same Hispano-Suiza engine that had powered the NiD 38. The airline operated around thirty examples on routes between western European cities until 1932.


Variants

Operators

Specifications (NiD 391)

Data from aviafrance.com

General characteristics

Performance


Notes

  1. Taylor 1989, 698
  2. 1 2 Hartmann 2006, 21

References

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