Avions Marcel Dassault (MD) designations

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Dassault models used to have "MD" designators

MD-450 Ouragan
MD-452 Mystere
MD-454 Mystere IV
MD-550 Mystere Delta, later Mirage.

What are the numbers for Super Mystère B.2 and B.4 ?
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Don't forget MD-451 and MD-453, the nightfighter variants of the Ouragan (MD-450) and Mystere II (MD-452).
I'll browse cuny's bible to see what number would have had the SMB-2... it must have been MD-456, but I think this designation system had been dropped circa 1954 (the SMB-1 flew in march 1955).

Au fait...
the SMB-1 had an Avon engine. first flight March 1955.
the SMB-2 was modified with an Atar-101. February 1956.

The SMB-4 had the Atar-9, and flew in March 1958.

But what the hell was the Super Mystere B3 ? ;D
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

[quote author=Archibald]But what the hell was the Super Mystere B3 ? ;D [/quote]

A night/all weather version?
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Hi,

What was MD-456 ?.
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Hello, this is my first post in this forum (however, here I've found several old friends).
I have the following list of MD. designations:
MD.303 (MD.303)
MD.311 Flamant III (MD.311)
MD.312 Flamant II (MD.312)
MD.315 Flamant I (MD.315)
MD.320 Hirondelle (MD.320)
MD.410 Spirale (MD.410)
MD.415 Communauté (MD.415)
MD.450 Ouragan (MD.450)
MD.451 Aladin (MD.451)
MD.452 Mystère (MD.452/MD.453/454/460) Mystère II
MD.453 Mystère (MD.452/MD.453/454/460) Mystère IIIN
MD.454 Mystère (MD.452/MD.453/454/460) Mystère IV
MD.460 Mystère (MD.452/MD.453/454/460) Mystère I
MD.550 Mirage I (MD.550)
MD.620 (MD.620) missile
MD.650 (MD.650)
MD.700 (MD.700)

No MD. number for Super Mystère...
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Welcome, Sandy 22 !

some additions:
MD.80 ABC (single engined trainer )
MD.316 (MB.316X and T)
MD.430 (twin engined COIN)
MD.560 (delta wing fighter)
MD.610 Cavalier
MD.620 (STOL fighter bomber)
MD.630 Cavalier STOL
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

My dear Jemiba,

what was MD-650 ?,it was mentioned in that site with no explaination;
http://www.mda.org.uk/aircraft/5444.htm
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

About Cavalier MD.610/620/630 see this site: http://www.aiaa.org/tc/vstol/unbuilt/dassault/index.html
(I found it after Jemiba's post mentioning Cavalier ...)

On the other hand, I had some references quoting that the Israeli missile Jericho was based on a Dassault design (quoted as MD.620).

It's known that before WW.2 the aircraft designed by Marcel Bloch were numbered in a MB. series.
After the war, Marcel Bloch changed his surname to Dassault and, accordingly, new designs got the prefix MD., keeping the same numbering sequence (so I'm a little puzzled about MD.80 ...)
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

I lost my post with my addenda :mad: :'( :p

Very quickly :

First flight of the MD.80 ABC : 16/10/1950
There is 5 "Cavaliers" in the Dassault story : 610, 620, 630, another STOL and a concurrent (but not the MD.921/922) of the SEPECAT Jaguar

MD.417 (MD.430 with 2 x turboprops Bastan)
MD.500 (1948/9 : design, 4 x Nene jet engines, transport)
MD.560 (1953 : design, 1 x ATAR 101 G engine, delta fighter)
MD.600 (1948/9 : design, 4 x G&R 14R engines, transport)
MD.620(1) "Cavalier" STOL (study 1959/60)
MD.620(2) "Jericho" Missile (first fly : 01/02/1965)
MD.650(1) (1948/9 : design, 4 x G&R 14R engines, transport)
MD.650(2) (1952 : design, 1 x Avon or SNECMA Vulcain jet engine, delta fighter)
MD.800(1) (1948/9 : design, 4 x RR Dart turboprops, transport)
MD.800(2) (1964 : design, bi-engine, naval, VG for the NATO marines)
MD.900 (1951 : design, 3/2 x ATAR jet engines, transport)
MD.921 (1964 : design with the MD.922, bi-engine, VG, concurrent of the SEPECAT Jaguar)
MD.922 (1964 : design with the MD.921, bi-engine, VG, concurrent of the SEPECAT Jaguar)
MD.1020 R (1946 : design, 2 x G&R 14R engines, transport)

With the Cavaliers, MD.620, MD.650 and MD.800 (and later with the Mirages F-1 E) we can see that Dassault used sometimes the same designations for differents planes.

For Archibald : in "Dassault les programmes 1945-1995" page 148 there is a photo of an almost finished mock-up of a "Mirage F3 02" :eek:
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

"so I'm a little puzzled about MD.80 .."
The MD.80 was a contender to the Nord 2800 and the winning Morane MS.730/732.
It was a time, when you already could say "Marcel Bloch is dead, long live Marcel Dassault !"
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Yep, one of the Cavalier and the Israeli IRBM have the same designation, MD-620. Very odd... ???

The Jericho missiles were designed by Dassault, that's a proven fact ;). All the programme was kept highly secret, as was french help in building Israel nuclear program...


In fact Dassault aircraft of the 50's were named from 3 series

- the MD- serie
- the Mystere serie + Roman number (XX for example).
- The name "Super Mystere"

The Super Mystere become the MD-454 AkA then the Mystere IV !
Its the only aircraft which has name in each three categories...

Seems that there was close links between the SMB-2 and early Etendards and Mirages... ;)
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Was just searching for the Jericho, found a drawing, but no other designation.
But here's another MD. designation, MD. SA 100, a ground-to-air missile .
(from Carlier/Berger: "Dassault - 50 Years of Aeronautical Adventure 1945-1995" )
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

The first Etendard was the -II. It had two Gabizo engine and a fuselage similar to...the Mirage II, plus the wing of the SMB-2 ! :eek:
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Sandy22 said:
About Cavalier MD.610/620/630 see this site: http://www.aiaa.org/tc/vstol/unbuilt/dassault/index.html
(I found it after Jemiba's post mentioning Cavalier ...)

On the other hand, I had some references quoting that the Israeli missile Jericho was based on a Dassault design (quoted as MD.620).

It's known that before WW.2 the aircraft designed by Marcel Bloch were numbered in a MB. series.
After the war, Marcel Bloch changed his surname to Dassault and, accordingly, new designs got the prefix MD., keeping the same numbering sequence (so I'm a little puzzled about MD.80 ...)

Ciao from Italy.

As I understand it, after WW II, Marcel Bloch changed his name to honor his brother who had fought in the Resistance during the war. His brother had been an officer in the French Army before the war and was well known for his advocacy of more modern tank warfare concepts. Apparently sufficiently so that when his brother went underground, his code name was the French term for "tank", Char D'Assault. And that's where the Dassault name came from.
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Exactly exact! ;)
In fact its brother (Darius Bloch) followed De Gaulle to London. At the time, its nickname was "chardasso". He then changed it into Dassault... and Marcel found the idea excellent, andadopted the name, too.
(I browsed chardasso on Google and found this
http://www.denistouret.net/textes/Assouline.html )
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

[quote author=Archibald]The Jericho missiles were designed by Dassault, that's a proven fact ;).[/quote]
That is only true for the Jericho-1 of the 60s.
By the time the Jericho-2 was was developped, France had long-since betrayed Israel and allied with its Arab customers. And in the meantime Israel had developed the Shavit satellite launchers.

In fact, there was so much suspicion lingering from those times that the 2nd generation Yericho were developed and implemented in a separate base.

(The sale of an A-bomb factory to Saddam in the 1970s by prime minister Jacques Chirac did not help)



And as for the Résistance codename of Marcel's brother the general, it was "charre d'assaut", which was a double entendre in French. (meaning both "tank" and "giant hoax")

And all this does not make me feel any younger...
 

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Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Hmmm no politics here. :mad:
Others countries armed dictators, so why reproaching that to France only ?

No A-bomb factory in Iraq, just civilian nuclear reactors (the Osirak nuclear plant, named at the time O-chirac , that's true ;D ).

Dassault helped built the Jericho-1, the Jericho-2 and shavit were improved variants by Israel alone (where's the problem ? )

About the betrayal... never heard about realpolitik ? De Gaulle has understood, 6 years before the Yom Kippur war that western world economies (including France) heavily depended from oil. Where's oil located ? in Arab countries, not Israel. Like it or not, this was Realpolitik... and De Gaulle was good at this game (this not mean that i like De Gaulle nor real politik, this is very cynical...)

Let's go back to the Dassault designation numbers...
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

And, sorry for that, but "charre" means nothing in french (certainly not big hoax ???).
(do you mean charade ? )
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Well, selling nuclear reactors isn't a threat to the piece in a region only, if
the buyer already has enough such equipment ... but then he probably
won't buy such technology at all ... ;D
Selling equipment for the chemical industry can mean boosting the agriculture
by producing more and better fertilizers and pesticides, but it also can mean
poisoning revolting minorities (the german industry is very experienced in this
field ..)
And supporting the enemy of once owns enemy can bring victory, but may
produce the new enemy for the time after ... the Taliban were at least partially
former Mudjahedin, the admired and supported foes of the soviet army in
Afghanistan and Bin Laden was agent and trustee of .. sorry, I forgot for
which country ...
Political decisions are mostly based on economics and seldom aimed at times
longer than, say 3 to 5 years.
What comes then, is out of the legislative period !

But sorry, we are completely off topic again ! We were speaking about
Dassault designation numbers, weren't we ?
;)
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

And, sorry for that, but "charre" means nothing in french (certainly not big hoax ???).
Ah, maybe you are too young to have known it, my friend. Good for you. ::)

"Charre" used to mean the same thing as "bobard", "pipo", bidon, etc, as my trusty old Larousse remembers:
Larousse-Charre.jpg


Charre fell in disuse some time in the 60s. Probably at about the time the pieds-noirs returned, when lots of colloquialisms changed. The younger ones might still be familiar with one form of it: "charrier", as in faut pas charrier grand-mère. :D
(for the non-Froggies, charrier means ribbing or pulling the leg).

Soooo, general Bloch had a definite panache in choosing his nom de guerre.
(actually, both brothers had panache in many things. Quite tall figures)

And now, back to our regularly scheduled MD-number research about SMB4...
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

- Charre- old french (from the 60's. Older than me, didn't know about the word. ::)

The Vautour was also proposed in robot variants.
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

I find the information in the book published by the GIFAS in 1982 (where Y could find the Nord Aviation M4 and many another "what if" french planes)
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Hi,

MD-660 was two-stage solid-propellent surface-to-surface
bombardment missile,it had been developed by the
Marcel Dassault under contract from the Israeli
government,the beginning was in 1968.

The Jericho surface-to-surface weapon was given the
designation MD-620.
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

hesham said:
MD-660 was two-stage solid-propellent surface-to-surface bombardment missile,it had been developed by the Marcel Dassault under contract from the Israeli government,the beginning was in 1968.

The Jericho surface-to-surface weapon was given the designation MD-620.
MD-620 was the basis for Jericho-1, and MD-660 for Jericho-2 and Shavit.
 
Known BLOCH and DASSAULT model numbers

Known DASSAULT model numbers:

Avions Marcel Dassault / Dassault Aviation

MD.80 ABC (single engined trainer)
MD.303 ten-passenger military multi-purpose light transport based on the Bloch MB.30 design, first flown 10 February 1947 (1 built)
MD.311 Flamant III bombing, navigation and photography training aircraft, former MB.301 (39 built)
MD.312 Flamant II six-seat transport/liaison aircraft (1950) (142 built)
MD.312B experimental version with heavier loaded weight (1 built)
MD.315 Flamant I 10-seat colonial communication/utility aircraft, former MB.303 (137 built)
MD.315B Flamant
MD.316(X) Flamant, one MD 315 aircraft fitted with two 820-hp (611-kW) SNECMA 14X Super Mars radial piston engines
MD.316T Flamant, one prototype fitted with a single-finned tail, and two 800-hp (597-kW) Wright R-1300-CB7A1 Cyclone radial piston engine
MD.320 Hirondelle 14-seat all-metal low-wing monoplane utility transport aircraft with swept vertical tail (1968) (1 built)
MD.410 Spirale prototype military transport (1 built)
MD.415 Communauté prototype light transport (1 built)
MD.417 (MD.430 with 2 x Bastan turboprops)
MD.420 enlarged MD.320 derivative with Astazou turbines
MD.430 twin engined COIN
MD.450 Ouragan, first French-designed jet fighter-bomber (3 built)
MD.450 Ouragan
MD.450A Ouragan, first production version (50 built)
MD.450B Ouragan, main production version with Hispano-Suiza-built Nene 104B engine, revised two-section nose landing gear doors
MD.450R Ouragan reconnaissance variant (1 built)
MD.450-30L Ouragan, pre-production prototype fitted with a SNECMA Atar 101b engine, air intakes on the sides (1 built)
MD.451 Aladin / Harmattan two-seat night fighter derivative of the Ouragan
MD.452 Mystère I advanced derivative of Ouragan powered by the Rolls-Royce Tay 250 centrifugal-flow turbojet (3 built)
MD.452 Mystère IIA prototypes powered by the Tay and armed with four Hispano 20 mm cannon (2 built)
MD.452 Mystère IIB prototypes which traded the four 20 millimeter cannon for two 30 millimeter DEFA revolver-type cannon (4 built)
MD.452 Mystère IIC pre-production machines (11 built) and production version (150 built)
MD.452M Mystère II, no details
MD.452W Mystère II, no details
MD.453 Mystère IIIN night fighter version, also known as the Mystère de Nuit (1 built)
MD.454 Mystère IV fighter-bomber prototype powered by a Rolls-Royce Tay 250 engine (1 built)
MD.454 Mystère IVA production version, first transonic aircraft to enter service in French Air Force (421 built)
MD.454 Mystère IVB upgraded variant with Rolls-Royce Avon or SNECMA Atar 101, afterburning engine and radar ranging gunsight (6 built)
MD.454 Mystère IVN two-seat all-weather interceptor version (1 built)
MD.455 Spirale III proposed high-wing transport version of MD.410 (not built)
MD.460 pre-project of Super Mystère (or Mystère I?)
MD.460 TT Super Mystère
MD.472
MD.473
MD.474
MD.475
MD.500 transport design, 4 x Nene jet engines (1948-49)
MD.550 Mirage I (initially called the Mystere Delta)
MD.560 delta wing fighter design, 1 x ATAR 101 G engine (1953)
MD.600 transport design, 4 x G&R 14R engines (1948-49)
MD.610 Cavalier
MD.620(1) Cavalier STOL variant (1959-60)
MD.620(2) Jericho surface-to-surface missile (was the basis for Jericho-1) (1965)
MD.620(3) STOL fighter bomber
MD.630 Cavalier STOL variant (1959-60)
MD.650(1) transport design, 4 x G&R 14R engines (1948-49)
MD.650(2) delta fighter design, 1 x Avon or SNECMA Vulcain jet engine (1952)
MD-660 two-stage solid-propellant surface-to-surface bombardment missile,
developed under contract from the Israeli government (basis for Jericho-2 and Shavit) (1968)
MD.742 fighter project
MD.743 Mach 3 project
MD.744 Mach 3 project
MD.745 Mach 3 project
MD.746 Mach 3 project
MD.747 Mach 3 project
MD.748 Mach 3 project
MD.749 Mach 3 project
MD.750 Mach 3 project
MD.751 Mach 3 project
MD.800 twin-engine naval VG design, for NATO navies (1964)
MD.900 transport design, 3/2 x ATAR jet engines (1951)
MD.921 twin-engine VG design, competitor of the SEPECAT Jaguar (1964)
MD.922 twin-engine VG design, competitor of the SEPECAT Jaguar (1964)
 
Re: Bloch (MB) and Dassault (MD) designations

Dassault designation for jet engine:
MD-30R (licenced version of the A. Siddeley "Viper") installed on the MD-550 Mirage I
 
Re: Bloch (MB) and Dassault (MD) designations

I have the following additions:

SEA-2: two seat reconnaissance and fighter aircraft that did not fly
SEA-3: Three seat reconnaissance aircraft which did not fly.
MB.30: Twin engined communications aircraft for eight passengers.
MB.93: Civilian registrations included F-AMBO.
MB.163: Development of MB.162. Not built.
MB.171: Development of the MB.170.
MB.172: Development of the MB.170.
MB.173: Development of the MB.170.
MB.203: Version of MB.200. Prototype only.
MB.480: Reconnaissance seaplane which flew for the first time in June 1939. Two were built.
MB.500: Three seat training aircraft of which one was built and flew for the first time in June 1938.
MB.700: Fighter aircraft of which one was built and flew on 19 April 1940.
MB.800: Three seat light training aircraft. One was built. It later developed into the SNCASO S.O.80 and S.O.90.
MB.900: Became S.O.90 under which designation it was built.
MB.1010: Fighter project from 1939. Not built. Also known as S.O.10.
MB.1011: Development of the MB.1010 which was not built. Also known as S.O.11.
MB.1020: Proposed commercial transport for 20 passengers. Not built although by June 1040 a fuselage was completed. Also known as S.O.20
MB.1030: Also known as S.O.30 under which designation it was built.
MB.1040: Two seat version of the MB.1010. Not built. Also known as S.O.40.
MD.303 Flamant: Based on the Bloch M.B.30 design, the M.D.303 was a military multi-purpose transport. It flew for the first time on 10 February 1947. Only one was built.
 
Thanks a lot Jos! I've added your information to the lists.

After giving it some thought, I decided to further split this thread into two separate topics, one dedicated to Bloch and the other to Dassault. This should lead to a much more satisfying understanding of these companies' designations.
 
Hi,


anther unknown aircraft project from George Messier site; the MD-912;


http://www.acam.asso.fr/histo/premiers_equipements7.php
 
Another Dassault MD 600 designation from the end of the book Mirage III, tome 3 (Chenel, Moreau, Liébert), DTU 2008 (page 405). It's not MD.600 transport design, 4 x G&R 14R engines (1948-49).

Project from 1968 with one M53 or J79 engine (25 to 39% more power, 15 to 20% less consumption) :

-Mirage III frame but with integrated tanks (like the Mirage F1 and no more the flexible tanks of the Mirage III) : more kerosene
-Mirage F1 nose (to improve visibility for landing)
-10% more wing area (34,85 m² for the Mirage III => around 38,34 m² for MD 600)
-Wing with LERX (like the Mirage III V) for 5% more lift at high incidence
-canard considered but not selected
-flight control derivative of Mirage IV and Mirage III V, with two elevators for each wing
-empty weight : Mirage III E like (5915 kg for the III E)
-external load : 5 000 kg (4 000 kg for the III E)
-consolidated landing gear with two wheels in the front (like the Mirage F1)
-250 km more range than the III E at low altitude
 
Re: Dassault MD numbers for the SMB2 & SMB4 ?

Deltafan said:
MD.1020 R (1946 : design, 2 x G&R 14R engines, transport)

By the way,this design was un-sequence designation,and developed from BA.1020
or MB.1020.
 
At the beginning of the Cuny book Les chasseurs Dassault Ouragans, Mystères et Super-Mystères there is some extras for the 500, 600 and 650, and 800 :

-MD 500 : four Nene engines, 40 tons, 60 passengers for 2000 km, wings and fins looked likes those of the Ouragan (1948-49)
-MD 600 and 650 : four GR 14 R or Wright 18 cylinders, high wing, 30 to 50 tons. Transport for 30 to 70 passengers and mixed cargo, for 3000 to 6000 km (1948-49)
-MD 800 : four RR Dart engines, 24 Tons, 40 to 60 passengers for 2000 km (1948-49)
 
By the way,

the designation MD 117-33 was a drawing number as I think in the book; French
Secret Projects : Post War Fighters,and was not in real MD series,am I right ?.
 
Deltafan said:
Another Dassault MD 600 designation from the end of the book Mirage III, tome 3 (Chenel, Moreau, Liébert), DTU 2008 (page 405). It's not MD.600 transport design, 4 x G&R 14R engines (1948-49).

Project from 1968 with one M53 or J79 engine (25 to 39% more power, 15 to 20% less consumption) :

-Mirage III frame but with integrated tanks (like the Mirage F1 and no more the flexible tanks of the Mirage III) : more kerosene
-Mirage F1 nose (to improve visibility for landing)
-10% more wing area (34,85 m² for the Mirage III => around 38,34 m² for MD 600)
-Wing with LERX (like the Mirage III V) for 5% more lift at high incidence
-canard considered but not selected
-flight control derivative of Mirage IV and Mirage III V, with two elevators for each wing
-empty weight : Mirage III E like (5915 kg for the III E)
-external load : 5 000 kg (4 000 kg for the III E)
-consolidated landing gear with two wheels in the front (like the Mirage F1)
-250 km more range than the III E at low altitude

Wait... a Mirage III airframe with a M53 ? I knew it ! It had to exists at some point in Dassault history.

http://www.tzr.io/yarn-clip/03c668e6-9ab6-42c7-acc6-0c82d9a08b69

When you think about it, the Mirage III-T rear end was enlarged to take a TF-30, which is quite a bulky and heavy turbofan (1800 kg and 120 mm in diameter). By comparison, a M53 is far smaller.

For some reasons however I always assumed (over the last 25 years !) that the M53 either come too late or that a Mirage III airframe couldn't handle it. The Mirage III-NG and the Kfir were screaming to me "you are wrong !" but I didn't listened them.

All those goodies are pretty cool and would make for some amazing drawings - Mirage F1 nose, and twin wheels, LERX, and a bigger M53 exhaust.

Nice bird, really, another missing link on the way from the Mirage III to the Mirage 2000.
 
Archibald said:
All those goodies are pretty cool and would make for some amazing drawings - Mirage F1 nose, and twin wheels, LERX, and a bigger M53 exhaust.
Nice bird, really, another missing link on the way from the Mirage III to the Mirage 2000.

Yes, but, it's a shame that we don't have a drawing...
 
hesham said:
By the way,

the designation MD 117-33 was a drawing number as I think in the book; French
Secret Projects : Post War Fighters,and was not in real MD series,am I right ?.
I think that, as we have MD, we have a number in the "real" MD serie (MD 117-33 or MD 107-33. We can see the designations at the bottom of the original drawings page 237 and 238) even if it has a "design" designation : the MD 117-33 was a YZ design.
 
Deltafan said:
Another Dassault MD 600 designation from the end of the book Mirage III, tome 3 (Chenel, Moreau, Liébert), DTU 2008 (page 405). It's not MD.600 transport design, 4 x G&R 14R engines (1948-49).

Project from 1968 with one M53 or J79 engine (25 to 39% more power, 15 to 20% less consumption) :

-Mirage III frame but with integrated tanks (like the Mirage F1 and no more the flexible tanks of the Mirage III) : more kerosene
-Mirage F1 nose (to improve visibility for landing)
-10% more wing area (34,85 m² for the Mirage III => around 38,34 m² for MD 600)
-Wing with LERX (like the Mirage III V) for 5% more lift at high incidence
-canard considered but not selected
-flight control derivative of Mirage IV and Mirage III V, with two elevators for each wing
-empty weight : Mirage III E like (5915 kg for the III E)
-external load : 5 000 kg (4 000 kg for the III E)
-consolidated landing gear with two wheels in the front (like the Mirage F1)
-250 km more range than the III E at low altitude

Thank you Deltafan for bringing this enhanced development of the Mirage III series to my attention!
Would be interesting to see drawings /models of this MD 600!!


Regards
Pioneer
 
It would essentially looks like a Mirage 5 or Mirage 50. It wouldn't be too hard to create a (fake) 3-view, a kind of frankenstein Mirage F1 / V / 2000 composite.
 
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