Stampe-Vertongen SV.4
The Stampe et Vertongen SV.4 is a Belgian two-seat trainer/tourer biplane designed and built by Stampe et Vertongen. The aircraft was also built under licence in France and French Algeria.
History
The SV.4 was designed as a biplane tourer/training aircraft in the early 1930s, by Stampe et Vertongen in Antwerp. The first model was the SV.4A, an advanced aerobatic trainer, followed by the SV.4B with redesigned wings and the 130 hp/97 kW de Havilland Gipsy Major engine.Only 35 aircraft were built before the company was closed during the Second World War. After the war, between 1948 and 1955, the successor company Stampe et Renard built a further 65 aircraft as trainers for the Belgian Air Force.
A licensed SV.4C version was built in France by SNCAN, and in Algeria by Atelier Industriel de l'Aéronautique d'Alger, the two firms completing a combined total of 940 aircraft. The postwar SV.4Cs were widely used by French military units as a primary trainer. Many also served in aeroclubs in France, numbers of which were later sold second hand to the United Kingdom and other countries. The Rothmans Aerobatic Team flew SV.4C aircraft from 1970 to 1973.
Variants
;SV.4: prototype;SV.4A: aerobatic trainer with 140 hp/104 kW Renault 4P-O5 engine
;SV.4B: improved version with 130 hp/97 kW de Havilland [Gipsy Major I]. Postwar trainers for the BAF were fitted with more powerful Cirrus Major or Gipsy Major X engine
;SV.4C: licence-built version with 140 hp/104 kW Renault 4Pei engine
;SV.4D: one aircraft re-engined with 175 hp/130 kW Mathis G.4R engine
A few SV.4s have been fitted with other engines, such as the Lycoming O-320, Ranger 6 or LOM 332b. At least one aircraft fitted with a Lycoming engine has been referred to by its owners as an SV.4E.
Military operators
- Belgian Air Force
- Force Publique
- French Air Force
- French Army
- French Navy
- Royal Air Force
- *No. [510 Squadron RAF] operated one aircraft "liberated" by Belgian pilots Léon Divoy and Michel Donnet in 1941, and flown from occupied Belgium to England.
Specifications (Post-War SV.4B)
In popular culture
- An SV.4 appears in the movie Biggles: Adventures in Time modified with a rear Scarff-ring turret.
- A modified SV.4 appears in the movie Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, sporting a fictional German paint scheme and a machine gun turret in the aft cockpit.
- Two SV.4C appear in the movie High Road to China, one destroyed as a result of aerial attack in the movie. They portray World War I planes, but were built after World War II
- Walter Matthau's character, Kendig, fakes his own death in an exploding SV4 over Beachy Head in the movie Hopscotch.