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Caudron C.690

The Caudron C.690 was a single-seat training aircraft developed in France in the late 1930s to train fighter pilots to handle high-performance aircraft. It was a conventional low-wing cantilever monoplane that bore a strong resemblance to designer Marcel Riffard's racer designs of the same period. Caudron attempted to attract overseas sales for the aircraft, but this resulted in orders for only two machines - one from Japan, and the other from the USSR. In the meantime, the first of two prototypes was destroyed in a crash that killed René Paulhan, Caudron's chief test pilot.

Variants
;C.690: Single-seat fighter trainer aircraft. Four aircraft built. ;C.690M: Slightly refined version for the ''Armee de l'Air''. Only 15 aircraft were built. ==Operators==
Operators
; • Armee de l'Air ; • Imperial Japanese Air Force - One aircraft only (KXC1) . ; • soviet Air Force - One aircraft only. ==Specifications (C.690M)==
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