# FBA Type A

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{{short description|French WW1 reconnaissance aircraft}}
<!-- This article is a part of Wikipedia:WikiProject Aircraft. Please see Wikipedia:WikiProject Aircraft/page content for recommended layout. -->
{{Infobox aircraft
| name                = FBA Type A, B, and C
| logo                = 
| logo_size           = 
| image               = Ministry of Information First World War Miscellaneous Collection Q33809 (cropped).jpg
| alt                 = 
| caption             = 
| long_caption        = 
| other_names         = 
| aircraft_type       = Reconnaissance flying boat
| aim                 = 
| outcome             = 
| related             = 
| national_origin     = 
| manufacturer        = [FBA](/source/Franco-British_Aviation)
| design_group        = 
| designer            = 
| builder             = 
| issuer              = 
| status              = Retired
| owners              = 
| primary_user        = France [Aéronautique Maritime](/source/A%C3%A9ronautique_Maritime)
| more_users          = [Royal Naval Air Service](/source/Royal_Naval_Air_Service)
| service             = 
| major_applications  = 
| proposals           = 
| prototypes          = 
| number_built        = ca. 250
| construction_number = 
| civil_registration  = 
| military_serial     = 
| radio_code          = 
| requirement         = 
| aircraft_carried    = 
| flights             = 
| total_hours         = 
| total_distance      = 
| construction_date   = 
| introduction        = 1913
| retired             = 
| first_flight        = 1913
| initiated           = 
| in_service          = 
| last_flight         = 
| expected            = 
| developed_from      = 
| variants            = 
| developed_into      = [FBA Type H](/source/FBA_Type_H)
| preservation        = 
| fate                = 
| predecessors        = 
| successors          = 
| concluded           = 
}}

The '''FBA Type A''' and the similar '''Type B''' and '''C''' were a family of reconnaissance [flying boat](/source/flying_boat)s produced in [France](/source/France) prior to and during [World War I](/source/World_War_I).  

==Development==
All three were unequal-span [pusher](/source/pusher_configuration) [biplane](/source/biplane) flying boats with a single step hull with [ash](/source/fraxinus_excelsior) [longerons](/source/longerons) covered in [laminated plywood](/source/plywood), divided by [bulkheads](/source/Bulkhead_(partition)) into eight compartments. The [empennage](/source/empennage) was carried on an upswept curved extension of the hull made from steel tubing. The pilot and observer sat side by side in the open cockpit.<ref name=Taylor>Taylor, 1989, p.381</ref>

The design originated with patents by [Donnet-Lévêque](/source/Donnet-L%C3%A9v%C3%AAque) and initially reflected the general configuration of that company's aircraft.
The Type A had a [single-bay](/source/interplane_struts) wing, while the larger Type B and C had two bay wings which otherwise only differed in the engine installed, with the type B using a {{cvt|100|hp|disp=flip}} [Gnome Monosoupape](/source/Gnome_Monosoupape) and the type C using a {{cvt|130|hp|disp=flip}} [Clerget 9B](/source/Clerget_9B). The RNAS contracted for 20 type B's from [Norman Thompson](/source/Norman_Thompson), who was responsible for building flying surfaces for hulls provided from France, which differed most noticeably by having a rectangular all-flying rudder in place of the D-shaped rudder used on French examples. The Type A was the only version with a fin attached to the rudder although some aircraft had a field modification with a fin being added between the hull and the tailplane. The Type H was developed from the Type C but was larger, had a new hull that wasn't attached directly to the tailplane, had an oval rudder and used a [Hispano-Suiza 8](/source/Hispano-Suiza_8) stationary engine.

==Operational history==
thumb|RNAS FBA Type B, which used British-built flying surfaces with a French-built hull
The earliest examples sold entered service with the [Austro-Hungarian Navy](/source/Austria-Hungary) and [Danish Navy](/source/Denmark) prior to World War I, but large-scale use began with sales to the [Royal Naval Air Service](/source/Royal_Naval_Air_Service) (RNAS) who initially ordered 20 Type B's from Norman-Thompson before receiving additional Type Cs from France. The French ''[Aéronautique Maritime](/source/A%C3%A9ronautique_Maritime)'' and Italian ''[Regia Marina](/source/Regia_Marina)'' (Royal Navy) followed with orders for Type Bs and Cs in 1915. The FBA flying boats were used for naval patrols and frequently encountered their opposing German and Austro-Hungarian Navy counterparts which led to some being converted to single seaters armed with a machine gun. Three Type Bs were the first aircraft operated by the [Portuguese Navy](/source/Portuguese_Navy).

==Variants==
;Type A: (1913) - powered by a {{cvt|50|hp|disp=flip}} [Gnome Omega](/source/Gnome_Omega), initial aircraft from 1913.
;Type A: (production) - powered by a {{cvt|80|hp|disp=flip}} [Gnome Monosoupape 7 Type A](/source/Gnome_Monosoupape_7_Type_A), enlarged production aircraft.
;Type B: powered by a {{cvt|100|hp|disp=flip}} [Gnome Monosoupape 9 Type B-2](/source/Gnome_Monosoupape_9_Type_B-2). Over 150 built. The 20 Norman-Thompson built Type B for the RNAS had different flying surfaces.
;Type C: powered by a {{cvt|130|hp|disp=flip}} [Clerget 9B](/source/Clerget_9B). 78 built.
;Type 11 HE.2: two-seat flying-boat.
;Type 14 HE.2: Two-seat training flying-boat for the French Navy. 20 built.
;FBA 100ch: French Navy nomenclature for the Type B
;FBA 130ch:French Navy nomenclature for the Type C

==Operators==
thumb|Beached Imperial Russian Navy FBA Type C
thumb|Former Portuguese Navy FBA Type B, at the Maritime Museum, Lisbon
;{{flag|Austria-Hungary}}
*''[Kaiserliche und Königliche Kriegsmarine](/source/Austro-Hungarian_Navy)''
;{{BRA}}
*[Brazilian Naval Aviation](/source/Brazilian_Naval_Aviation) - Two Type B aircraft.
;{{DNK}}
*[Danish Navy](/source/Danish_Navy)
;{{FRA}}
*''[Aéronautique Maritime](/source/A%C3%A9ronautique_Maritime)''
;{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Italy}}
*[Italian Navy](/source/Italian_Navy)
;{{POR}}
*[Portuguese Naval Aviation](/source/Portuguese_Naval_Aviation) - Three Type B aircraft.
;{{flagcountry|Russian Empire|1914}}
*[Imperial Russian Air Service](/source/Imperial_Russian_Air_Service)
*[Imperial Russian Navy](/source/Imperial_Russian_Navy)
;{{flagcountry|UKGBI}}
*[Royal Naval Air Service](/source/Royal_Naval_Air_Service) - 116 aircraft<ref name=Thetford>Thetford, 1982, p.461</ref> including 20 Type B aircraft.
*[Gosport Aircraft and Engineering Company](/source/Gosport_Aircraft_Company)<ref name=Mulder>Mulder, 2015</ref>

==Survivor==
A single example of a type B survives in the [Museu de Marinha](/source/Museu_de_Marinha) in Lisbon. This aircraft was reassembled from parts from the [Portuguese Navy](/source/Portuguese_Navy)'s first two aircraft. 

==Specifications (Type C)==
thumb|FBA Type C drawing
{{Aircraft specs
|ref=French aircraft of the First World War,<ref name="Davilla">Davilla, 2002, 259</ref> and The Rand McNally encyclopedia of military aircraft, 1914-1980<ref name=Angelucci>Enzo, 1983, p.88 </ref>
|prime units?=met
|crew=Two, pilot and observer
|length m=9.14
|span m=13.71
|height m=3.05
|wing area sqm=32
|airfoil=
|empty weight kg=640
|gross weight kg=907
|max takeoff weight kg=
|fuel capacity=
<!-- Powerplant-->
|eng1 number=1|eng1 name=[Clerget 9B](/source/Clerget_9B)|eng1 type=9-cylinder air-cooled rotary piston engine|eng1 hp=130
|prop blade number=2|prop name=fixed-pitch pusher propeller
|prop dia m=<!-- propeller aircraft -->
|prop dia note=
<!-- Performance -->
|max speed kmh=110
|cruise speed kmh=
|stall speed kmh=
|never exceed speed kmh=
|never exceed speed kts=
|range km=320
|endurance=2.75 hours
|ceiling m=
|time to altitude={{cvt|2000|m}} in 25 minutes
|wing loading kg/m2=
<!-- Armament -->
|guns= 1 x {{cvt|7.7|mm}} machine-gun
|bombs= 2 x {{cvt|11|kg}} bombs
}}

==References==
{{Commons category multi|FBA Type B|FBA Type C}}
===Citations===
{{Reflist|2}}

===Bibliography===
*{{cite book |last1=Davilla |first1=Dr. James J. |last2=Soltan |first2=Arthur M. |title=French aircraft of the First World War |year=2002 |publisher=Flying Machines Press|isbn=1891268090|page=259}}
*{{cite book|last1=Durkota|first1=Alan|last2=Darcey|first2=Thomas|last3=Kulikov |first3=Victor |title= The Imperial Russian Air Service &mdash; Famous Pilots and Aircraft of World War I|year=1995|publisher=Flying Machines Press|location=Mountain View, CA |isbn=0963711024}}
*{{cite book|last=Enzo|first=Angelucci|title=The Rand McNally encyclopedia of military aircraft, 1914-1980|date=1983|publisher=Military Press|location=San Diego|isbn=0517410214|page=88}}
*{{cite book|last1=Morareau|first1=Lucien|title=Les Aeronefs de l'Aviation Maritime|publisher=ARDHAN (Association pour la Recherche de Documentation sur l'Histoire de l'Aeronautique Navale|location=Paris, France|year=2002|isbn=2-913344-04-6|pages=44–47}}
*{{cite book|last1=Taylor|first1=Michael J.H.|title=Jane's encyclopedia of aviation|date=1989|publisher=Portland House|location=London|isbn=0517691868| page=381}}
*{{cite web|last1=Mulder|first1=Rob J M|title=THE BRITISH AIRCRAFT ON THE ELTA OF 1919|url=https://www.europeanairlines.no/the-british-aircraft-on-the-elta-of-1919/|website=European Airlines|publisher=EUROPEAN AIRLINES / ROB MULDER|accessdate=10 February 2017|date=2015}}
*{{cite book|last1=Thetford |first1=Owen|title=British naval aircraft since 1912|date=1982|publisher=Putnam|isbn=0370300211|edition=5th|page=461}}
*{{cite magazine|title=The Franco-British Aviation Co Ltd. |magazine=Flight |date=27 December 1913 |volume=V (No. 52) |issue=261 |page=1405 |url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1913/1913%20-%201379.html |accessdate=10 December 2018}}

<!--==External links==-->

{{FBA aircraft}}

Category:1910s international military reconnaissance aircraft
Category:1910s French military reconnaissance aircraft
Category:FBA aircraft
Category:Flying boats
Category:Single-engined pusher aircraft
Category:Biplanes
Category:1910s French patrol aircraft
Category:Aircraft first flown in 1913
Category:Rotary-engined aircraft

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [FBA Type A](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FBA_Type_A) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FBA_Type_A?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
