The SNCASE S.E.5000 Baroudeur was a French single-engined
lightweight fighter
The Lightweight Fighter (LWF) program was a United States Air Force technology evaluation program initiated in the late 1960s by a group of officers and defense analysts known as the " Fighter Mafia". It was spurred by then-Major John Boyd's ' ...
designed by
SNCASE
SNCASE (abbreviated from ''Société nationale des constructions aéronautiques du Sud-Est'') or Sud-Est was a French aircraft manufacturer. The company was formed on February 1, 1937, by the nationalization and merger of Lioré et Olivier, Pote ...
(''Sud-Est'') for the NATO
NBMR-1
NATO Basic Military Requirement 1 (NBMR-1) was a document produced by a North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) committee in the 1950s detailing the specification of future combat aircraft designs. The requirement was for a "light weight tacti ...
"Light Weight Strike Fighter" competition. An unusual design without a conventional landing gear, it used a wheeled trolley for take-off and three retractable skids to land. The Baroudeur did not enter production.
Design and development
The Baroudeur was a lightweight fighter, designed to operate from grass airfields, conceived and designed in the early stages of the
Cold War.
The ''Baroudeur'' (
French Foreign Legion
The French Foreign Legion (french: Légion étrangère) is a corps of the French Army which comprises several specialties: infantry, cavalry, engineers, airborne troops. It was created in 1831 to allow foreign nationals into the French Army ...
slang for brawling soldier) was the brainchild of Wsiewołod "John" Jakimiuk, a Polish engineer who had worked on similar concepts at
PZL
PZL (''Państwowe Zakłady Lotnicze'' - State Aviation Works) was the main Polish aerospace manufacturer of the interwar period, and a brand of their aircraft. Based in Warsaw between 1928 and 1939, PZL introduced a variety of well-regarded air ...
and
Avro Canada
Avro Canada was a Canadian aircraft manufacturing company. It was founded in 1945 as an aircraft plant and within 13 years became the third-largest company in Canada, one of the largest 100 companies in the world, and directly employing over 5 ...
. The rationale behind the design was to operate tactical jet interceptors from unprepared sites in case the air force bases were destroyed in a preemptive strike (drawing from the German experience in the last stages of World War II). It used a wheeled trolley that could be used for take off from grass, and three retractable skids (the third at the tail for landing) for take off from snow- or ice-covered surfaces. The skids incorporated a crude suspension/damping system made of rubber rings. The three-wheeled trolley had provision to use rockets (two or four according to terrain plus two back-up) if needed to assist. Apart from the landing gear the aircraft was a conventional shoulder-wing monoplane with a 38 degree swept wing and tail surfaces and powered by a
SNECMA Atar 101C turbojet with wing-root intakes. The first of two prototypes flew on the 1 August 1953. Three pre-production aircraft designated the S.E.5003 were also built with Atar 101D turbojet engines but the type was not ordered into production.
Operational testing
Extensive testing was conducted by test pilot Jacques "Tito" Maulandi and though the underfunded prototypes proved troublesome, the design also showed some promising characteristics. It was later dubbed a "Jet dirt bike" for its off-road capabilities.
It proved capable to fly with its take off trolley in place (so it could easily switch to another unprepared airstrip), to take off with the skids only on some suitable terrain (sometimes with RATO rockets for extra thrust), to land on beaches (it was test flown off the
La Baule
La Baule-Escoublac (; br, Ar Baol-Skoubleg, ), commonly referred to as La Baule, is a commune in the Loire-Atlantique department, Pays de la Loire, western France.
A century-old seaside resort in southern Brittany with villas, casino, luxury hot ...
beach; on one occasion barely escaped the incoming tide), frozen lakes, motorways, even marshes.
It managed barely supersonic speeds reaching over Istres air base.
Testing also included high speed runs with a mocked-up crude rocket propelled airplane (with straight wings and some working controls) on the real rocket-powered trolley, complete with final separation at over 160 km/h (100 mph).
On one such occasion the test pilot suffered concussion and light injuries when the trolley cartwheeled at high speed and became unmanageable.
The SE 5000 was entered, along with the promising
Breguet Taon Breguet or Bréguet may refer to:
* Breguet (watch), watch manufacturer
** Abraham-Louis Breguet (1747–1823), Swiss watchmaker
** Louis-François-Clement Breguet (1804–1883), French physicist, watchmaker, electrical and telegraph work
* Bré ...
in the NATO test session for a lightweight fighter but lost out to the
Fiat G91.
The five prototype and preproduction Baroudeurs were disposed of as gunnery targets at
Cazaux
Cazaux () is a commune of the Ariège department in southwestern France.
Population
See also
*Communes of the Ariège department
The following is a list of the 327 communes of the Ariège department of France.
The communes cooperat ...
airforce base in south-west France but a non-profit concern organisation (Ailes Anciennes Le Bourget, with ties to
Le Bourget Air Museum) managed to scavenge most of the remains of three or four wrecks to create one SE 5003 in display condition.
"Réflexions sur un avion fossile par son pilote en attente de fossilization"
Jean Jacques "Tito" Maulandi
Variants
;S.E.5000 Baroudeur
:Prototype powered by a SNECMA Atar 101C turbojet, two built.
;S.E.5003 Baroudeur
:Pre-production aircraft powered by a SNECMA Atar 101D turbojet, three built.
Specifications (S.E.5003)
See also
Notes
Bibliography
*
*
*
External links
Contemporary reporting in ''Flight''
1954
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sncase Baroudeur
1950s French fighter aircraft
Baroudeur
Single-engined jet aircraft
Shoulder-wing aircraft
Aircraft first flown in 1953