Canadair
Parent
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Canadair Ltd. was a civil and military
Canadair's origins lie in the establishment of a factory for Canadian Vickers in the Saint-Laurent borough of Montreal, at Cartierville Airport. It was created as a separate entity by the government of Canada on 11 November, 1944.
Throughout much of its existence, it was a subsidiary of various other aircraft manufacturers prior to being nationalized by the Canadian government in 1976. For a decade, the company operated as a federally-owned
During its operational years, Canadair achieved several aviation firsts; the CL-44D, based on the British Bristol Britannia airliner, was the first design that allowed access by swinging the entire rear fuselage. The CL-89 and CL-289 were the first surveillance drones to be put into service in several countries' armed forces. The experimental CL-84 was the first VTOL aircraft that rotated the wings to achieve vertical lift-off (tiltwing). The CL-215 was the first purpose-designed water bomber.
History
Canadair was formally created on 11 November 1944 as a separate entity by the government of Canada. Having absorbed the operations of the
During the immediate
During the 1950s, Canadair decided that it would develop its own indigenous trainer aircraft as a private venture. This aircraft, which would become the CT-114 Tutor was the product of the company’s in-house Preliminary Design department.[2][3] By August 1957, the basic configuration had been completed, which was of a turbojet-powered, low-wing aircraft, complete with a tricycle undercarriage and a side-by-side cockpit arrangement.[4] Despite a lack of official backing from the Canadian Government, the Royal Canadian Air Force's (RCAF) Directorate of Training’s Jet Trainer Liaison Committee had closely engaged with the company; their involvement in the project had reportedly made a significant impact in the aircraft's final design.[4] During September 1961, the Canadian government, having been impressed by the performance of the prototype, placed a sizeable order for 190 production aircraft on behalf of the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF). Serving as the service's primary trainer platform, the Tutor would be operated as such for over thirty years.[3][5]
Another indigenously-developed design was the
Perhaps the company's most commercially successful product was the
Outside of the field of aviation, Canadair opted to diversify into various other sectors, developing its own range of industrial and commercial products. The "Canarch" division was involved in
In the late 1950s, the United States Army contracted Canadair to develop a small light-weight all-terrain amphibious tracked vehicle. In turn, Canadair developed the CL-70 RAT Remote Articulated Track;[15] this vehicle, while not a commercial success, gave Canadair useful experience towards the development of the upgraded CL-91 Dynatrac, which was a marketing success and purchased by the US Army as XM-571.[16]
During 1976, the Canadian government acquired Canadair Ltd. from General Dynamics. It remained a federal
Following the company's acquisition by Bombardier, the Canadair name had continued to be prominently used in the branding of its larger series of
Products
Model | Name | Type | Crew | Passengers | Launch dates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CL-1 | Canadair CL-1 | Flying boat | First flight: | License-built variant of the Consolidated Model 28-5 (PBV-1A or Canso A and OA-10A-VI | ||
C-4 & C-5 | North Star | Cargo aircraft/Airliner | 2 or 3 | 52 | First flight: 1946 First del'y: 1948 |
License-built variant of the Douglas DC-4 |
CL-13 | Sabre | Fighter aircraft | 1 | 0 | First flight: 1950 First del'y: 1950 |
License-built North American F-86 Sabre |
CL-28 | Argus | Maritime patrol aircraft | up to 15* | First flight: 1957 First del'y: 1960 |
Development of the Bristol Britannia; *normal flights also included a reserve crew of four | |
CL-30 | CT-133 Shooting Star | Trainer (aircraft) / ECM / Communication
|
1 or 2 | 0 | First flight: 1952 First del'y: 1952 |
License-built Lockheed T-33 Shooting Star
|
CL-41 CL-41G-5 |
Tutor Tebuan |
Trainer (aircraft)
|
2 | 0 | Launch date: 1960 First flight: 1962 First del'y: 1966 |
|
CL-43 | Twin-engine logistics concept aircraft[18] | Never built, but later influenced the design for the CL-204 (later as CL-215); modified floatplane based on PBV-1 Canso (PBY-1 Catalina) with two R-1340 engines[citation needed] | ||||
CL-44 | the Forty-Four CC-106 Yukon |
Military transport aircraft/Cargo aircraft | 9 | 134 | Launch date: 1959 | Based on Bristol Britannia |
CL-45 | ASW concept helicopter | 1954 | Never built; joint effort with Hiller Aircraft and was to use three T38-GE2 engines[citation needed] | |||
CL-52 | Bomber | 1956 | A Avro Arrow project. After the Arrow was cancelled the aircraft was returned to the U.S.[19]
| |||
CL-60 | Trainer/transport aircraft | 1 / 2 | 3 / 12 | 1952 | Beech T-36 fuselage and final assembly; program cancelled in 1953[20] | |
CL-61 | RAT (Remote Articulated Track) | Armored personnel carrier
|
1959 | Prototypes for the CL-70[21] | ||
CL-66
|
Cosmopolitan | Transport aircraft | 2 | 52 | First flight: 1959 | Modified Convair CV-540
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CL-70 | RAT (Remote Articulated Track) | Armored personnel carrier
|
1959 | Prototypes for the CL-91 Dynatrac[21] | ||
CL-84 | Dynavert | Vertical/Short Takeoff/landing Experimental aircraft | 2 | up to 15 combat troops | First flight: May 1965 | Late 1960s - No production aircraft |
CL-289
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Surveillance Drone | none | 0 | First flight: 1964 First del'y: 1969 |
||
CL-90
|
Starfighter | Trainer (aircraft)
|
1 or 2 | 0 | First flight: 1961 First del'y: 1962 |
License-built Lockheed F-104 Starfighter |
CL-91 | Dynatrac | Armored Personnel Carrier
|
1960s | [21] | ||
CL-204 | Water bomber | 1962 | Based on CL-43 and Canadair CL-1 Canso (variant of Consolidated PBY Catalina), the concept led to production of the larger CL-215 | |||
CL-210 | Satellite antenna | n/a | n/a | 1965 | Installed at Shirleys Bay, Ontario[22] | |
CL-212 | Hovercraft | 1964–1967 | Development transferred to General Dynamics Electric Boat[22] | |||
CL-213 | Fisher | All-terrain vehicle | 1 | 1 | 1963–1964 | [21] |
CL-215 | Scooper | Water Bomber | 2 | up to 18 passengers (utility version) | First flight: 1967 First del'y:1969 |
In 2016, Viking Air Ltd. acquired the Type certificate for the Canadair CL-215; total 125 built earlier. |
CL-218 | Flxible New Look | Transit bus | 1 | 45 | 1965–1966 | License-built Flxible New Look bus F2D6V-401-1 |
CL-219 | CF-5 ( CF-116 Freedom Fighter )
|
Fighter bomber
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1 or 2 | 0 | First flight: 1968 | License-built Northrop F-5 Freedom Fighter; total 240 built[23] |
CL-225 | Satellite antenna | n/a | n/a | 1965 | Installed at Lac-Bouchette, Quebec[22]
| |
CL-227
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Sentinel | Remote control unmanned aerial vehicle | none | 0 | First flight: 1980 | |
CL-251 | Subcontract | n/a | n/a | 1971–1975 | Wing panels and other components for the Dassault Mercure airliner[20] | |
CL-252 | 1972 | Modification of two Lockheed L-188 Electra airliners for Environment Canada ice patrols[20] | ||||
CL-257 | Subcontract | n/a | n/a | 1973–1985 | Fuselage sections for the Boeing 747SP[20] | |
CL-281 | Subcontract | n/a | n/a | 1977–1994 | Components for the P-3C Orion[20]
| |
CL-415 | Superscooper | Water Bomber | 2 | 1 on jump seat, 8 on bench seats | First flight: 1993 First del'y: 1994 |
In 2016, Viking Air acquired the Type certificate for the Canadair CL-415; total 95 built earlier. |
CL-600
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Challenger | Business jet | 2 | 8 to 19 | First flight: 1978 Certification: 1980 |
|
CL-600 | CRJ 100/200
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Regional jet | 2* | 50 | First flight: 1991 Introduction: 1992 |
*plus flight attendants |
CL-600 | CRJ700/900/1000 | Regional jet | 2* | 66-104 | First flight: 1999 Introduction: 2001 |
*plus flight attendants |
Missiles
- Velvet Glove - Air-to-air missile project.
See also
- Bombardier Aerospace
- de Havilland Canada
- Learjet
- Short Brothers
References
Citiations
- ^ "Canadair." Archived 2011-02-07 at the Wayback Machine Project North Star Restoration Primer, April 2003. Retrieved: 31 December 2011.
- ^ Dishlevoy 2005, pp. 8–10.
- ^ a b Norris 1998, p. 22.
- ^ a b Upton, Bill. "CL-41 Prototype." Canadian Aviation Historical Society, Retrieved: 31 May 2019.
- ^ "CT-114 Tutor." airforce.forces.gc.ca, Retrieved: 31 May 2019.
- ^ Flight International 1968, p. 269.
- ^ Flight International 1968, pp. 269, 271.
- ^ "Canadair CL-215." Flight International, 21 November 1968. p. 871.
- ^ Flight International 1968, p. 272.
- ^ Bill Upton (2007). "Canadair CL-600 / 601 / 604 Challenger serial 1003, registration C-GCGT" (PDF). Canada aviation museum. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-03-06. Retrieved 2020-03-14.
- ^ Mike Hirst (12 August 1978). "Challenger". Flight International. pp. 470–478.
- ^ "Certificate A-131". Transport Canada. 2019-11-22.
- ^ "OPINION: In praise of the Challenger". Flight International. 25 November 2018.
- ^ Murdo Morrison (12 October 2018). "NBAA: Business jet designs that changed the industry". FlightGlobal.
- ^ "Canadian RAT can scurry anywhere." Popular Science, December 1959, pp. 118–120.
- ^ "CL-91 Dynatrac." Canadian America Strategic Review. Retrieved: 31 December 2011.
- ^ "Inc. – Bombardier – Home". Bombardier. 25 February 2011. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Canadair Forty Four Trivia." Swingtail: The Newsletter of the CL44 Association, December 2001. Retrieved: 31 December 2011.
- ^ Block, Burwell, ed. "The CL-52/B-47B." Archived 2011-09-30 at the Wayback Machine The B-47 Stratojet Association. Retrieved: 4 June 2011.
- ^ a b c d e "1952 Subcontracts". Archived from the original on 15 July 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
- ^ a b c d "1956 Vehicles". Archived from the original on 17 June 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
- ^ a b c "1958 Special Products". Archived from the original on 19 June 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
- ^ "Canadair (Northrop) CF-5A Freedom Fighter, twin engine jet fighter, Canada".
Bibliography
- Dishlevoy, Roy W. "Hatching the Snowbirds: The Canadair CL-41/CT-114 Tutor, Its Early History Remembered." CAHS Journal, Vol, 45, No. 1, Spring 2007.
- "Canadair CL-215". Flight International, 22 February 1968. pp. 269–272.
- ISBN 0-07-549965-7.
- ISBN 0-9690703-7-3.
- Marsaly, Frederic and Samuel Pretat. "Bombardiers d'eau/ Canadair Scoopers." Editions Minimonde76, May 2012. ISBN 978-2-9541818-0-6.
- Norris, Guy. "Rocky Mountain High." Flight International, 6 January 1998. pp. 22–23.
- Pickler, Ron and ISBN 0-921022-07-7.
- Walters, Brian (March–April 1997). "Neary, but Not Quite: Canadair's 'Paper Planes'". ISSN 0143-5450.
External links
- Other (Canadair) Products Archived 2020-10-07 at the Wayback Machine