Farman Moustique

Moustique
Farman F 455 Super Moustique, Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace, Le Bourget, Paris
Role Sport/tourer
National origin France
Manufacturer Société des Aéroplanes Henry et Maurice Farman, Boulogne-Billancourt
First flight May 1919
Primary user Service de l'Aviation Populaire (French government)
Number built 59

The Farman Moustique is a family of French monoplanes built by the Société des Aéroplanes Henry et Maurice Farman at Billancourt.

Shortly after the end of World War I, Farman introduced a low powered single seat monoplane for sport and tourism. It flew for the first time in May 1919 and was named the Moustique (in English, Mosquito). A little later, aircraft of this kind became known in the United Kingdom as motor gliders, the subjects of the first Lympne Trials of 1923. In 1922 one Aviette, without its engine, had already won prizes at a national glider competition. Three months before the Lympne Trials several Aviettes competed in an equivalent French meeting for moto-aviettes at Buc. The design was revived, over 17 years after its first appearance, as the F 450 Moustique and was one of the aircraft purchased by the French government as part of l'Aviation Populaire programme.


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