Dassault Aviation ( ) is a
French
aircraft
manufacturer of military,
regional and business jets, a
subsidiary of Dassault Group.
It was founded in 1930 by Marcel Bloch as
Société des Avions
Marcel Bloch or "MB". After World War II, Marcel Bloch changed
his name to
Marcel Dassault, and the
name of the company was changed to
Avions Marcel
Dassault on 20 December 1947. In 1971, Dassault acquired
Breguet, forming
Avions
Marcel Dassault-Breguet Aviation (AMD-BA). In 1990, the
company was renamed Dassault Aviation.
History
The
Société
des Avions Marcel Bloch was founded by
Marcel Bloch in 1930. In 1935 Bloch and Henry
Potez entered into an agreement to buy Société Aérienne Bordelaise
(SAB), subsequently renamed Société Aéronautique du Sud-Ouest. In
1936 the arms industry in France was nationalised as the Société
Nationale de Constructions Aéronautiques du Sud-Ouest (SNCASO).
Marcel Bloch was asked to act as delegated administrator of the
Minister for Air.
During the occupation of France the country's aviation industry was
virtually disbanded. Marcel Bloch was imprisoned by the
Vichy government in October 1940.
In 1944
Bloch was deported to the Buchenwald
concentration camp by the German occupiers where he
remained until it was liberated on 11 April 1945.
On 10 November 1945 at an extraordinary general meeting of the
Société Anonyme des Avions Marcel Bloch the company voted to change
its form to a limited liability entity,
Société des Avions
Marcel Bloch, which was to be a holding company. On 20 January
1947 Société des Avions Marcel Bloch became
Société des Avions
Marcel Dassault to reflect the name adopted by its
owner.
In 1954 Dassault established an electronics division (by 1962 named
Electronique Marcel Dassault), the first action of which was to
begin development of airborne radars, soon followed by seeker heads
for air-to-air missiles, navigation and bombing aids. From the
1950s to late 1970s exports become a major part of Dassault’s
business, major successes were the
Dassault Mirage series and the
Mystere-Falcon. The average rate in the period 1952-1977 was
58%.
In the years 1965 and 1966 the French government stressed to its
various defence suppliers the need to specialize to maintain viable
companies. Dassault was to specialise in combat and business
aircraft,
Nord Aviation in
ballistic missiles and
Sud Aviation civil and military transport
aircraft and
helicopters. (Nord Aviations
and Sud Aviation would merge in 1970 to form
Aérospatiale) .
On 27 June 1967 Dassault (at the urging of the French government)
acquired 66% of
Breguet Aviation.
Under the merger deal Société des Avions Marcel Dassault was
dissolved on 14 December 1971, with its assets vested in Breguet,
to be renamed Avions Marcel Dassault-Breguet Aviation
(AMD-BA).
Dassault Systèmes was
established in 1981 to develop and market Dassault’s
CAD program,
CATIA. Dassault
Systèmes was to become a market leader in this field.
In 1979 the French Government took a 20% share in Dassault and
established the Societé de Gestion de Participations Aéronautiques
(
SOGEPA) to manage this and an indirect 25%
share in Aerospatiale (the government also held a direct 75% share
in that company). In 1998 the French Government transferred its
shares in Dassault Aviation (45.76%) to Aerospatiale. On 10 July
2000, Aérospatiale-Matra merged with other European companies to
form
EADS.
In 2000
Serge Dassault resigned as
Chairman and was succeeded by Charles Edelstenne. Serge Dassault
was appointed Honorary Chairman.
Shareholders
Subsidiaries
Sogitec, a wholly owned
subsidiary of Dassault, makes advanced avionics
simulation,
3D imaging, military
flight simulators, and
document imaging systems.
Products
Military
- MD 315 Flamant, 1947
- MD 450 Ouragan, 1951
- MD 452 Mystère II,
1952
- MD 453 Mystère III, 1952 (a one-off MD-452 nightfighter)
- MD 454 Mystère IV,
1952
- MD 550 Mirage, 1955
- Super Mystère,
1955
- Mirage III, 1956,
- Mirage IIIV (1965 -
1966)
- Étendard II, 1956
- Étendard IV, 1956
- MD 410 Spirale,
1960
- Mirage IV (atomic bomber), 1960
- Balzac, 1962
- Atlantique (ATL 1, originally
a Breguet product), 1965
- Mirage F1, 1966
- Mirage 5, 1967
- Mirage G, 1967
- Milan, 1968
- Mirage G-4/G-8, 1971
- Alpha Jet,
1973
- Jaguar (50/50 joint venture with
BAC), 1973
- Super
Étendard, 1974
- Falcon Guardian 01,
1977
- Mirage 2000, 1978
- Mirage 2000N/2000D
1986
- Mirage 4000, 1979
- Mirage 50, 1979
- Falcon Guardian,
1981
- Atlantique 2 (ATL 2),
1982
- Mirage III NG, 1982
- Rafale, 1986
- nEUROn, expected 2010
Civilian
_20F-5_(PH-BPS).jpg/180px-Dassault_Falcon_(Mystere)_20F-5_(PH-BPS).jpg)
Dassault Falcon (Mystere) 20F-5
See also
References
External links