Loire 46

Loire 46

Status at War’s Outbreak

By September 1939, the Loire 46 was already obsolete.

Designed in the early 1930s, its fixed landing gear, open cockpit, and modest performance made it unsuitable for modern air combat.

Deployment

Still in service with several French Air Force squadrons at the start of the war.

Used primarily in training and second-line duties, not frontline combat.

Some aircraft may have been retained for local defence or liaison roles, but they were quickly phased out.

Retirement

The type was fully retired by 1940, following the rapid German advance and collapse of French military infrastructure.

Strategic Context

The Loire 46’s brief wartime role highlights the transitional nature of 1930s aviation.

It was a relic of interwar design philosophy—visually striking but tactically outclassed by faster, better-armed monoplanes like the Morane-Saulnier MS.406 and Dewoitine D.520.

Loire 46.01 First Prototype

Origin & Purpose

The Loire 46.01 was the initial prototype of the Loire 46 series, developed by Loire Aviation in France during the early 1930s.

It was intended to modernise the earlier Loire 43 and 45 designs, which had proved unsatisfactory.

Design Features

Retained the gull-wing monoplane configuration from its predecessors.

Featured an open cockpit and fixed landing gear, typical of interwar designs.

Incorporated a revised wing-fuselage junction, improving pilot visibility and handling.

First Flight

The Loire 46.01 took to the air on 1 September 1934, demonstrating promising flight characteristics that led to further development and eventual production.

Loire 46 Production Model

Type

Single-seat fighter aircraft 

Manufacturer

Loire Aviation, France 

Production Quantity

61 units built between 1935 and 1936

Operational History

French Air Force

Entered service in 1936 as a frontline fighter 

Spanish Civil War

A small number were supplied to the Spanish Republican Air Force. 

World War II

By 1939–1940, the Loire 46 was obsolete and relegated to training and secondary roles.

It was retired shortly after the German invasion.

Specifications (Loire 46)

Crew

1

Length

7.88 m (25 ft 10 in)

Wingspan

11.83 m (38 ft 10 in)

Height

4.13 m (13 ft 7 in)

Wing area

19.5 m² (210 sq ft)

Empty weight

1,450 kg (3,197 lbs)

Gross weight

2,100 kg (4,630 lbs)

Powerplant

1 × Gnome-Rhône 14Kfs

14-cylinder air-cooled

radial piston engine,

694 kW (931 hp)

Propellers

3-bladed metal variable-pitch propeller

Performance

Maximum speed

370 km/h (230 mph, 200 kn)

Range

750 km (470 mi, 400 nmi)

Service ceiling

11,750 m (38,550 ft)

Rate of climb

12 m/s (2,400 ft/min)

Time to altitude

3,000 m (9,800 ft) in 3 minutes 18 seconds

Armament

Guns

4× fixed forward-firing 7.5 mm (0.295 inch) MAC 1934 machine guns mounted in the wings.

 

 

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