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BLOCH MB135

 


Technical Specifications
Type
Four-seater four-engine heavy bomber with low wings and retractable gear
Date first flight
January 12, 1939
Wingspan
21.28 m
Lenght
15.44 m
Height
3.90 m
Wing Area
60 m²
Empty Weight
5840 kg
Max. Takeoff Weight
11484 kg
Cruising Speed
425 km/h
Maximum Speed
500 km/h at 5000 m
Climbing Speed
Service ceilling
9940 m
Range
2000 kms
Crew
4 Men
Motorization
4 Radial Engine Gnôme-Rhône 14 M-6/7 14 Cylinder, air cooling, of 700hp on take-off
Armament
1 Machine-gun MAC of 7.5mm on carriage in the nose
1 Cannon Hispano-Suiza of 20mm in a dorsal position
1 Machine-gun MAC de 7.5mm on carriage in ventral position
1350kg of bombs bay

 


Production

A single prototype was built, before the program was abandoned for the benefit of multi-engined, more classical and already in production, such as the Amiot 350..

 


Historical

The Bloch MB 135 was born from the program A21 of December 1936. This first concerned a project of B4 twin-engined engines equipped with engines Gnome Rhone (1934), program then extended to four-engines. The Bloch MB 135 was in competition with the Breguet Br 482 or CAO 700, other four-engine.

The design of the Bloch MB135 is linked to the Bloch MB131. The Bloch Company, an integral part of the SNCAO after the nationalization of the Aerospace Companies, tried to improve its Bloch MB 131, the main shortcoming of which is the sub-motorization. The engines were replaced by Hispano-suiza 14 AA and the aircraft became the MB133 with a double rudder. It only flew in 1937 and was followed quickly by the Bloch MB134 quite similar. The study of this project stretched out in time and the first of the three prototypes ordered did not finally fly until July 1939. This rapid aircraft was damaged in Avil 1940 during tests at the CEMA and was finally destroyed before the German advance. In parallel with this project, the Bloch company developed a four-engine derivative, a formula not very common at the time, under the name Bloch MB135.

Only one of the two prototypes was manufactured, equipped with Gnome-Rhone 14M engines, less powerful than the Gnome-Rhone 14P, but with a narrower cross-section, the Gauge engines (Gn�me-Rh�ne 14M6) rotating in the opposite direction than the Gnome -Rh�ne 14M7).

The Bloch MB 135 makes its first flight to Villacoublay on January 12, 1939. This aircraft was immediately high-performance and easy to maneuver, but no orders are made by the state: the latter prefer to concentrate on the Leo 451 twin-engine or Amiot 356


Bibliography

1) _ Editions Larivière :
- Le Fanatique de L'Aviation : No342

 


Photos Album

 


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