Mignet Pou-du-Ciel

Mignet Pou-du-Ciel
Flying Flea series
Mignet HM.14
Role Sport, personal and trainer aircraft
Manufacturer homebuilt aircraft
Designer Henri Mignet
First flight 10 September 1933 (HM.14)
Introduction 1933
Produced 1933-today
Unit cost USD$350 (in 1933)
US$9,000-$18,000 (HM.290E in 2007)[1]

The Flying Flea (Pou du Ciel literally "Louse of the Sky" in French) is a large family of light homebuilt aircraft first flown in 1933.

Contents

Development

The Flying Flea family of aircraft was designed by Frenchman Henri Mignet.[2]

Between 1920 and 1928, Mignet built various prototypes from the HM.1 to the HM.8, a monoplane that was the first of his designs that really flew. Between 1929 and 1933, he continued building prototypes, and testing them in a large field near Soissons.[3]

HM.14

In 1933, Mignet successfully flew for the first time in his HM.14, the original flying flea, and publicly demonstrated it. In 1934, he published the plans and building instructions in his book Le Sport de l'Air. In 1935, it was translated into English and serialised in Practical Mechanics, prompting hundreds of people to build their own Flying Fleas.[4]

Mignet's original HM.14 prototype aircraft was powered by a 17 hp (13 kW) Aubier-Dunne 500 cc two stroke motorcycle engine. It had a wingspan of 19.5 feet (5.9 m), a length of 11.5 feet (3.5 m) and a gross weight of 450 lb (204 kg).[5] It had a usable speed range of 25-62 mph (40–100 km/h).[2] In the UK in 1935 and 1936, many aerodynamic and engine developments took place, notably by Stephen Appleby, John Carden and L.E. Baynes.[3]

Design

Mignet made the aircraft intentionally simple. The Flying Flea is essentially a highly staggered biplane, which almost could be considered to be a tandem wing aircraft, built of wood and fabric. The original design was a single-seater, and had two-axis flying controls. The aircraft had a standard control stick. Fore-and-aft movement controlled the front wing's angle of attack, increasing and decreasing the lift of the wing. Because the front wing was located forward of the center of gravity, that would pitch the nose up and down.[5]

Side-to-side movement of the stick controlled the large rudder. This produced a rolling motion because the wings both had substantial dihedral, through yaw-roll coupling. The rudder had to be quite large not only to produce adequate roll but also because the fuselage was very short, reducing the leverage of the rudder. The Flying Flea, being a two axis aircraft, could not be landed or taken off in substantial crosswinds. This was not a big issue when the aircraft was designed because at that time aircraft were usually flown from large open fields allowing all take-offs and landings into wind.[5][3]

Mignet claimed that anyone who could build a packing case and drive a car could fly a Flying Flea.

Variants

HM.380 Pou-du-Ciel (HB-YBK)
HM.1000 Balerit side view showing wing arrangement
HM.1000 Balerit in flight

The HM.14 led to more than 300 different models of the Flying Flea.[6] Some of these are:

  • HM.16 Pou-Bébé (Baby Pou) - 1936, single-seat lightweight Pou, 25 hp Ava engine[7]
  • HM.18 - 1937, single-seat, enclosed cockpit, 35 hp Mengin engine. (example: G-AENV).[7]
  • HM.19 - 1937, two-seat, enclosed cockpit, 45 hp Salmson engine.[7]
  • HM.210 - 1937, single-seat, enclosed cockpit, airworthiness certificated.[7]
  • HM.280 Pou-Maquis - 1944, single-seat, folding wings, for French partisans.[7]
  • HM.290 - 1945, single-seat, enclosed cockpit. Became popular for amateur construction from plans, with optional enclosed cockpit, various types of engine 25 hp (19 kW) to 70 hp (52 kW). (example: CF-RFH).[1][5][8][7]
  • HM.293 - 1946, single-seat variant for larger pilots, typically powered by 50-60 hp VW engine. (example: G-AXPG).[1][8][7]
  • HM.310 Estafette - 1952, two-seat, enclosed cockpit, 67 kW (90 hp) Continental A90-12F engine.[7]
  • HM.320 - 1955, single-seat, enclosed cockpit. (example: F-PHZI).[7]
  • HM.330 Cerisier en Fleurs - 1954, two-seat, enclosed cockpit.[7]
  • HM.350 - 1957, two-seat, enclosed cockpit. (example: F-PHQT).[7]
  • HM.351 - 1955, two-seat, enclosed cockpit. Also known as Tachikawa R-HM (example: JA3094).[5][7]
  • HM.360 - 1957, single-seat, enclosed cockpit, improved wing geometry. (example: F-PNUO).[5][9][7]
  • HM.380 - 1957, two-seat, enclosed cockpit, 1100 lb gross weight, typically powered by 60-100 hp engine. (example: F-PKFN).[9][7]
  • HM.390 - 1981, two-seat(?), enclosed cockpit. (example: F-WJDY).[10]
  • HM.1000 Balerit - 1986, two-seat, pusher propeller, rear-mounted 64 hp Rotax engine, used by the French Army.[7]
  • HM.1100 Cordouan - 1996, two-seat, front-mounted 80 hp Rotax engine.[7]

Safety concerns

In the 1930s, many Fleas crashed when pilots could not recover from shallow dives, resulting in some deaths. As a result, Flying Fleas were grounded and even banned from flight permanently in some countries.[5] In the United Kingdom, restrictions were placed on Flying Fleas, following a fatal crash on 4 May 1936 at an air display at Penshurst Airfield, Kent.[11]

When on approach to land, the pilot would push the stick forward to gain speed for the flare and landing. As speed built up, the rear wing, operating at a greater angle of attack would gain lift and pitch the aircraft's nose further downward. The pilot's normal reaction would be to pull back on the stick. This action would increase the angle of attack on the front wing by lowering the trailing edge of the wing. Because the trailing edge of the front wing was close to the leading edge of the rear wing, the front wing's downwash would accelerate the air over the rear wing and cause it to gain lift more quickly that the front wing, resulting in an ever increasing nose pitch-down and flight directly into the ground.[5]

Mignet had not encountered this problem during his testing of his prototype, because he could not afford a large horsepower engine. When builders started putting larger engines on them and expanding the flight envelope, the wing interference problem surfaced.[5]

The Royal Aircraft Establishment in the United Kingdom and the French Air Ministry conducted full-scale wind tunnel tests, and discovered the problem. Their investigations resulted in changes to the airfoil used and the spacing of the wings to prevent aerodynamic interference. Later Mignet Flea designs incorporated these changes.[5]

By 1939, there were many improved Flying Fleas in the air, but the aircraft never completely overcame its dangerous reputation.[5]

Amateur construction

Shortly after the plans appeared in 1934, many enthusiasts in Europe and the USA began to build their own aircraft. In France there were at least 500 completed. The average cost of materials was then $350.

Modern aircraft enthusiasts have continued to build their own aircraft, and vary the original HM.14 design and its derivatives over the years, and outside the UK, they are successfully flown in countries like Australia. French enthusiasts, for example, hold an annual meeting every June.

Aircraft on display

HM.290 built by John Sayle, Langley BC, 1962, with 75 hp McCulloch engine,[6] at the Canadian Museum of Flight.
HM.293 at Royal Military Museum, Brussels
HM.360 at Musée régional de l'air d'Angers-Marcé

Specifications (HM.290 Flying Flea)

Data from Plane and Pilot: 1978 Aircraft Directory[2]

General characteristics

Performance

See also

  • Croses EC-1 Pouplume
  • Croses EC-6 Criquet
  • Croses EC-8 Tourisme
  • Croses EC-9 Para-Cargo
  • Lederlin 380L
  • Pouchel
  • Universal American Flea Ship

References

  1. ^ a b c Kitplanes Staff: 2008 Kit Aircraft Directory, page 53, Kitplanes Magazine December 2007 Volume 24, Number 12, Belvior Publications, Aviation Publishing Group LLC.
  2. ^ a b c Plane and Pilot (1977), p. 142
  3. ^ a b c Ellis & Jones (1990)
  4. ^ Home Built Aeroplane (display board). Manchester: Museum of Science and Industry. 
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bowers (1984), pp 73-78
  6. ^ a b Canadian Museum of Flight (2006). "Mignet Pou du Ciel (Flying Flea)". http://www.canadianflight.org/collect/col_13.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-30. 
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Mignet aircraft types airspot.ru
  8. ^ a b Falconar, Chris (June 2007). "MIGNET "Flying Flea"". http://members.shaw.ca/falconark/FA/mig_flea.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-30. 
  9. ^ a b Falconar, Chris (June 2007). "MIGNET HM 360/380". http://members.shaw.ca/falconark/FA/mig_360.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-30. 
  10. ^ Jerram, Mike. 1981. Sporting and Homebuilt Aircraft. MacDonald Phoebus
  11. ^ "Another Fatal "Pou" Accident". Flight (7 May 1936). http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1936/1936%20-%201189.html. 
  12. ^ Ogden (2007)
  13. ^ a b Ogden (2009)

Bibliography

  • Bowers, Peter M. (1984) Guide to Homebuilts - Ninth Edition. TAB Books ISBN 0-8306-2364-7
  • Ellis, Ken; Jones, Geoff. 1990. Henri Mignet and his Flying Fleas. Haynes Publishing ISBN 0854297650
  • Mignet, Henri. Le Sport D'Air (French, 661 pages)
  • Mignet, Henri. The Flying Flea: How to Build and Fly It
  • Ogden, Bob (2007). Aviation Museums and Collections of North America. Air-Britain ISBN 0851303854
  • Ogden, Bob (2008). Aviation Museums and Collections of The Rest of the World. Air-Britain ISBN 9780851303949
  • Ogden, Bob (2009). Aviation Museums and Collections of Mainland Europe. Air-Britain ISBN 9780851304182
  • Ord-Hume, Arthur W.J.G. Britain's Flea craze, Aeroplane Monthly, May 1973
  • Ord-Hume, Arthur W.J.G. The First Home-Built Aeroplanes (Paperback) ISBN 978-1-84033-449-4 (Re-print of Practical Mechanics article on building the HM.14)
  • Plane and Pilot (1977). 1978 Aircraft Directory. Werner & Werner Corp ISBN 0-918312-00-0
  • Simpson, Rod (2001). Airlife's World Aircraft. Airlife Publishing ISBN 1-84037-115-3

External links


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