The LH.70 was entirely conceived and directed by the
Société Aérienne Bordelaise (S.A.B), one a series of nine prototype colonial policing aircraft from different manufacturers. The programme was led by the Direction Générale Technique and one of its requirements was for all metal construction to withstand the hot and humid climates of French
African colonies. Another was to provide a large and flexible load carrying space, so it could be used for variety of tasks. It had a
high wing of trapezoidal plan, built in three parts: a short central section which joined the
fuselage and two outer panels occupying the great majority of the span. The wings were constructed around four
spars and, like the rest of the aircraft were
duralumin skinned. There were high
aspect ratio ailerons over more than half the span. The LH.70 was powered by three
Lorraine 9Na Algol nine cylinder
radial engines with narrow
chord ring cowlings. Two were mounted on the undersides of the wings with full-chord
nacelles behind them. The third engine was on the nose of the fuselage, which was in three rectangular section parts, built around four
longerons and skinned with longitudinally corrugated duralumin. The forward part included the engine mountings and the enclosed cabin just ahead of the wing, seating the pilots side-by-side with dual controls. Behind that was the main load carrying space, up to high, accessed via a port side, obliquely hinged door just aft of the wing
trailing edge and lit by a strip of small rectangular windows under the wing. The final part, which had a sloping underside, provided an open dorsal
cockpit for an observer and reached back to the tail. There were three fuel tanks, one under the pilots' cabin and two in the rear of the wings. The
empennage was conventional apart from one feature. The trapezoidal fixed surfaces were built around pairs of spars and skinned with corrugated dural, with a
cantilever tailplane mounted on top of the fuselage. Its slightly tapered,
unbalanced rudder extended down to the keel and worked in a small cut-out between the similarly shaped
elevators. The novel feature was the result of the colonial's need for multi-tasking and consequent wide range of centre of gravity. Instead of
trim tabs, the LH.70 had a pair of trapezoidal winglets, mounted on the lower longerons about ahead of the elevator hinge and projecting about out of the fuselage. To cope with rough colonial landing fields the LH.70 needed a robust
undercarriage. Its track was determined by the separation of the outer engines, as each vertical, shock absorbing
oleo strut was fixed to the second wing spar within the nacelle. Instead of an axle each wheel hub was mounted on a near-horizontal V-strut, hinged on the lower fuselage longeron. The wheels had
hydraulic brakes. At the rear there was an
oleo-damped, steerable
tailskid. ==Development==