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Louis de Monge

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jan olieslagers (talk | contribs) at 17:45, 17 January 2012 (Undid revision 471894505 by 90.214.92.31 (talk)No need to be mentioned here, the aircraft has its own article. This one is about Mr. De Monge). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Louis de Monge (Count Pierre Louis de Monge de Franeau) (1890–1977) was a notable Belgian engineer. He is mainly remembered as the designer of the Bugatti Model 100P racing plane.

Career

During the first world war, De Monge engineered, designed and produced aircraft propellers, selling some 40.000 to the French government. De Monge then worked with a Mr. Buscaylet, making conventional parasol monoplanes. Later, he designed twin-engined lifting wings, reminiscent of the Burnelli UB-14, such as his models 7.4 and 7.5. The rights to these were acquired by Bordeaux shipbuilders Dyle et Bacalan who wanted to develop transatlantic airliners from them, but nothing came of it beyond some prototypes like the Dyle et Bacalan DB-10 heavy bomber. In 1925, de Monge joined car and motorcycle makers Impéria at Liège as chief research engineer. Some of his work there included torsion bar suspension and automatic transmissions. De Monge left Impéria in 1937 to join Ettore Bugatti, to design the Bugatti Model 100P racer plane. The plane was almost completed in Paris in 1940 but, with the advent of the Second World War, was moved to the French countryside where it was hidden for the next thirty years. It eventually went to the U.S.A. where it now resides at the EAA Museum.

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