Brochet MB.70
The Brochet MB.70 was a two-seat light aircraft developed in France in the early 1950s for recreational flying and amateur construction.
Design and development
It was a high-wing braced monoplane of conventional configuration that seated the pilot and passenger in tandem within a fully enclosed cabin. It was fitted with fixed tailwheel undercarriage layout and was of all-wooden construction. Progress was hastened by the publication of a Service de l'Aviation Légère et Sportive requirement for a new light aircraft for French aeroclubs, and a series of development machines were built with a variety of different engines, eventually leading to the definitive Brochet MB.80.Variants
- MB.70 - prototype powered by Salmson 9Adb radial
- MB.71 - version with Minié 4.DC.32 engine
- MB.72 - version with Continental A65 horizontally opposed four-cylinder engine
- MB.73 - version with Continental A65-85 horizontally opposed four-cylinder engine
- MB.76 - version with Continental C90-14F horizontally opposed four-cylinder engine
Units using this aircraft