Piaggio P.50

P.50
One of the two P.50-I prototypes
Role Heavy bomber
National origin Italy
Manufacturer Piaggio
Designer Giovanni Casiraghi
First flight P.50-I: 1937
P-50-II: 1938
Number built P.50-I: 2
P.50-II: 1


The Piaggio P.50 was an Italian prototype heavy bomber designed and built by Piaggio for the Regia Aeronautica (Italian Royal Air Force).

Design and development

The P.50 was the first design by Giovanni Casiraghi—following an outline for the project laid out by Piaggio designer Ing Giovanni Pegna—for the Piaggio company.

P.50-I

The first model, the P.50-I, was a four-engine shoulder-wing monoplane with a single large tail fin and rudder. It was powered by four 544-kilowatt (730-horsepower) Isotta-Fraschini Asso XI.RC V12 engines mounted in tandem pairs on the wings, with each engine driving one three-bladed propeller; two of the propellers were mounted in a pusher and two in a tractor configuration. For defense, the P.50-I had three machine gun positions, including a nose turret

Piaggio built two P.50-I prototypes, the first of which—MM369—flew in 1937. The second—MM370—was damaged in accident while landing at Malpensa airfield in 1938.

No production order for the P.50-I materialized.

P.50-II

A new model of the P.50, the P.50-II, appeared in 1938. It was re-engined with four 746-kilowatt (1,001-horsepower) Piaggio P.XI RC.40 radial engines, each driving a three-bladed propeller, and dispensed with the tandem-engine, pusher-puller configuration of the P.50-I, instead mounting the engines separately with all four propellers as tractors. Its defensive armament was upgraded to five 12.7-millimeter (0.5-inch) machine guns.

Piaggio produced a single P.50-II prototype designated MM371. No production ordered resulted for the P.50-II, but Piaggio later applied the experience it gained from the design and construction of the three P.50 prototypes to the development of the Piaggio P.108 heavy bomber of World War II.

Variants

P-50-I
Four-engines in tandem push-pull nacelles - two built.
P-50-II
A single more powerful P.50 with four engines in separate tractor nacelles
P 50 first version, four liquid-cooled engines in two nacelles
P 50 second version, four air-cooled engines in four nacelles
P 50 metallic version, Casiraghi designed it like a P 108B forerunner

Operators

 Kingdom of Italy

Specifications (P.50-I)

Data from Italian Civil and Military Aircraft 1930–1945[1]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament


Notes

  1. Thompson 1963, pp. 224–226.
  2. Donald 1997, p. 733.

References

External links

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