F-BDRA Latecoere 631
(c/n 04)
Design of this elegant six engined 70-ton
'boat was begun just prior to the Nazi occupation of
France. The prototype took four years to complete and was then
confiscated by the Germans
who flew
it to Friedrichshafen for testing, where it was promptly destroyed the
very next day
after its
arrival (20 January 1944) by an allied air raid. A second
prototype was hidden from
the
occupying forces on the outskirts of Toulouse (where the Latecoere
factory was located)
and
re-emerged after the war. A further ten Late 631s were
built and were operated by Air
France in the
late 1940s on their trans-Atlantic route to the French West Indies (to
Martinique).
Air France
sold the machines off after a couple of years, and all were withdrawn
from use by
around 1955
after four were lost in crashes. I always thought the
aircraft looked rather low
in
the water (I was more accustomed to seeing Short Sunderlands and PBY
Catalinas), but it
appears that
this amount of hull in the water was not detrimental to getting the
monster airborne.
The image below shows it taxiing. The
outboard floats retracted into the outer engine nacelle.