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FORTY-SEATERS

NEW FRENCH AIR LINERS

French airliners to carry forty passengers and a crew of four are shortly to be put on the London-Pans-Lyons-Marseillea route, says the "Daily Telegraph." , I The Golden Clippers now in use are not out of date, but increasing traffic demands machines of greater capacity. The new type is a Farman, of which six are being bu^Lt. , _, They have a front bay window in the cabin giving an unrestricted view forward, a cocktail bar, a library, a bridge room, and two saloons. Of the first two, one is fitted with four Griome "Rhone 800 h.p. engines, and the other with four Hispano-Suiza 690 h.p. engines. The results of comparison in operation will determine the choice of engines for the other four. It is a noteworthy fact that in all the principal airline countries <fourengined 40-seaters are now being built. Great Britain will have flying-boats and land aeroplanes of this capacity. ; The United States will soon have the new 40-seater Douglas, and Holland, France, and Germany have adopted the same policy: Airline developments in France at the present moment are of much interest. A Faf Eastern machine for 16 sleeping berths, or 24 day seats, is being built by Marcel Bloch. It-will have four engines./ On the South Atlantic service; France is using both flying-boats and land aeroplanes. One hundred successful mailcarrying flights have already been made. ' ■• To be first in the field with a regular Atlantic passenger flying-boat service is the object of Air France, and two four-engined flying-boats capable of carrying a ton of mail 3000 miles against a.30 miles per hour head-wind have been launched. One has nearly finished its tests, and the other is about to begin them. Both have comfortable (Sleeping quarters for four passengers. Air France lines now span the old and the new worlds. There is a closeknit European system and two longdistance arms, one across two continents and an ocean to Santiago on the Pacific coast, and the other ■ across India to Hanoi in. French Indo-China.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19360921.2.53

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 71, 21 September 1936, Page 8

Word Count
337

FORTY-SEATERS Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 71, 21 September 1936, Page 8

FORTY-SEATERS Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 71, 21 September 1936, Page 8

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