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Canadair

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Canadair <tr><td colspan="2" style="text-align: center; padding: 16px 0 16px 0;">Image:Logo canadair.gif</td></tr>
Fate incorporated into Bombardier.
<tr><th style="text-align:right;">Successor</th><td>Bombardier Aerospace</td></tr>
Founded 1944
Defunct 1986
Location Montreal, Canada

Canadair was a civil and military aircraft manufacturer in Canada. It was the subsidiary of other aircraft manufacturers and a nationalized corporation until privatized in 1986 and became the core of Bombardier Aerospace.

Canadair's origins lie in the foundation of a manufacturing centre for Canadian Vickers in the Montreal suburb of Saint-Laurent, at Cartierville Airport. Canadair Plant One is still there, although the airport no longer exists.

Contents

[edit] History

Canadair was created in 1944 as a separate entity by the government of Canada as a manufacturer of patrol PBY Canso flying boats for the Royal Canadian Air Force. In 1946, the Electric Boat Company bought a controlling interest in Canadair. General Dynamics (GD) would come from the merger of the two and Electro-Dynamics in 1952. In 1954, GD purchased Convair and reorganized Canadair as its Canadian subsidiary.

[edit] Crown corporation

In 1976, the Canadian government acquired Canadair. It remained a federal crown corporation until 1986 when it was sold to Bombardier as part of the privatization plan of the Mulroney government. It became the core of Bombardier Aerospace.

As part of Bombardier, Canadair lived on in the series of business jets or regional jets known as "RJ Series" or CRJs. More recently the branding has been dropped, and new projects from all of Bombardier's various aircraft divisions are now known simply as Bombardier Aerospace.

[edit] Legacy

Canadair has a record of several aviation firsts. The CL-44D, based on the Bristol Britannia, was the first design that allowed access by swinging the entire rear fuselage. The CL-89 and the CL-289 were the first surveillance drones to be put into service in several countries' armed forces. The CL-84 was the first VTOL aircraft that rotated the wings to achieve vertical lift-off (tiltrotor). The previously mentioned CL-215 was the first purposed-designed water bomber. In European countries, "Canadair" has become synonymous with water bomber airplanes used in aerial firefighting.

Canadair had diversity in other projects. One division "Canarch" was involved in curtain wall design and manufacture for a number of buildings. They also produce the cabs for many control towers operated by the Federal Aviation Administration in the United States. Both tracked and air-cushioned vehicles were designed, but only a few samples were built.

Product list and details (date information from Canadair)
Aircraft Description Seats Launch date 1st flight 1st delivery Scheduled to cease production
C-4 North Star/Argonaut/C-5
license built conversion of Douglas DC-4
Transport/Airliner Crew of 2/3, 52 passengers 1946 1948
Canadair Canadair Sabre (CL-13)
license built North American F-86 Sabre
Fighter 1 1950 1969
Canadair T-33 Shooting Star (CL-30)
license built Lockheed T-33 Shooting Star
Fighter/Trainer 2 1952 1952
CL-66 / Cosmopolitan
modified Convair 540
Transport crew of 2, 52 passengers 1959
Canadair Canadair F-104 / Starfighter (CL-90)
license built Lockheed F-104 Starfighter
Fighter/Attack/Nuclear Payload Delivery/Trainer 1/2 1961 1962
CL-89, CL-227 and CL-289 Surveillance Drones none 1964 1969
CL-215 Water Bomber 1967
CL-219 CF-5 Freedom Fighter, licence built Northrop F-5 Freedom Fighter Fighter bomber 1/2 1968
CL-415 Water Bomber 1993 1994
Challenger Business Jet 8-19 1980 1986
CRJ-100, -200, -600 and -700 series Business Jet 50-90 1980s 1990s
Bombardier BRJX Business Jet 80-120
CL-227/Sentinel Remote Controlled Drone none 1980
CL-28 Argus Marine Reconnaissance crew of up to 5 (normal flights also included a reserve crew of 4) 1957 1980
CL-41 Tutor Trainer 2 1960
CL-84 / Dynavert Vertical/Short Takeoff/landing aircraft 2 (up to 15 combat troops could be carried) 1960 1965 late 1960s - No production aircraft
CL-44/CC-106 Yukon Transport crew of 9, 134 passengers 1959

[edit] References

  • Milberry, Larry. The Canadair North Star. Toronto: CANAV Books, 1982. ISBN 0-07-549965-7.
  • Milberry, Larry. The Canadair Sabre. Toronto: CANAV Books, 1986. ISBN 0-9690703-7-3.
  • Pickler, Ron and Milberry, Larry. Canadair: The First 50 Years. Toronto: CANAV Books, 1995. ISBN 0-921022-07-7.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

ja:カナディア


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