The 60 T (T for transport) was the result of a decision made in May 1929 to turn a current military transport project into a civil, passenger carrying aircraft. The resulting design also owed much to the earlier, single engine
Bernard 190 civil transport, though the 60 T had three engines and a greater span. Even though it retained only the wing from the military design, construction began on 11 June and was completed on 20 August. The Bernard 60 was an all wood aircraft. Like the Barnard 190, it was a
high wing cantilever monoplane. In plan the thick wing was straight tapered with rounded
tips. The
fuselage was flat sided with a curved underside. The crew's enclosed cabin was just ahead of the wing
leading edge and the long passenger compartment, with twelve seats in all and five windows on each side, was lower down beneath the wings. Despite the rapid build, the accommodation was heated, ventilated and sound-proofed; entry was via a port side door which included the rearmost window. The sound proofing was assisted by silencers on the engines. The
empennage of the Bernard 60 was conventional with a rounded
fin and
rudder and a
tailplane with a swept leading edge mounted on top of the fuselage. It had a split axle
undercarriage with single mainwheels mounted on V-form struts from the lower fuselage
longerons and landing loads taken by vertical struts to the wing just inboard of the engines, combined with a
tailskid. The
trimotor Bernard 60 was unusual in having different engines in the nose and on the wings. The central engine was a nine-cylinder,
Gnome-Rhône 9Ady Jupiter, with five cylinder,
Gnome-Rhône 5Bc Titan engines on the wings. The designers would have preferred about 225 kW (300 hp) from each of three identical engines but early in 1929 there were no available homologated types of this power. == Flight history ==