Air Weapons

Light Bomber (1939)

Bloch

MB.170

MB.170
MB.170

The most modern multi-role French aircraft at the beginning of the war was the superb Bloch MB.170 series which for the most part served as an armed reconnaissance bomber. It displayed excellent handling characteristics and overall good performance but the German invasion came before it was able to be fielded in sufficient numbers as only fifty aircraft had been delivered by May 1940. During the heavy fighting that followed, the MB.174 distinguished itself suffering few losses in combat (most were destroyed on the ground) with surviving aircraft taken up by Vichy forces and the Luftwaffe who used them as trainers, they were also used by the Free French in North Africa and Tunisia and some were built post-war as torpedo bombers for the Aéronavale. The MB.174 is also memorable for their long-range reconnaissance missions which were described in author Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's book Flight to Arras.

The prototype MB.170 first flew on 15 February 1938 with the first production versions, the MB.174 entering service 11 months later (the first sortie was flown by none other than Saint-Exupéry himself). Production of the Bloch 174 accounted for the grand majority of units and manufacturing continued after the war. A last-ditch emergency variant with increased payload via an internal bomb bay was designated MB.175 and saw most action after the surrender by both Allied and Axis forces. Other variants included the limited-production MB.176 with Pratt & Whitney Twin Wasp engines and the MB.175T torpedo bomber built after the war for naval service.

Preceded by:

None

Succeeded by:

None

Datafile

DesignMB.174
TypeLight Bomber
Year1939
Crew3
Dimensions
Length12.25 m
Height3.550 m
Wing Span17.90 m
Wing Arean/a
Weight
Empty5,600 kg
Maximum7,160 kg
Wing Loading188.4 kg/m²
Performance
Speed530 km/h
Ceiling11,000 m
Range1,650 km
Powerplant
Engine2 x 14N 48/49
Gnome-Rhône
850 kW
Thrust/Weight0.37
Armament
Guns7 x 7.5-mm
Payload400 kg
Production
Built59
Total227