The original specification that led to the VG series was offered in 1936 in order to quickly raise the number of modern aircraft in French service, by supplying a "light fighter" of wooden construction that could be built rapidly in large numbers. The contract resulted in three designs, the VG-30, the
Caudron C.714 and the
Bloch MB.700. Prototypes of all three were ordered. Named for engineer Michel Vernisse (V) and designer Jean Galtier (G), the
VG-30 was all wooden in construction, using
plywood over stringers in a semi-
monocoque construction. The layout was conventional, a low-wing
monoplane that bore a striking resemblance to the later
Italian Macchi C.202. Armament consisted of a 20 mm
Hispano-Suiza HS.404 engine-mount
moteur-canon firing through the
propeller hub, and four 7.5 mm MAC 1934 M39 drum-fed machine guns, two in each wing. The design was supposed to be powered by the
Potez 12Dc flat-12 air-cooled
inline engine, but this ran into development problems. The prototype was then fitted with a
Hispano-Suiza 12Xcrs instead, and flew in this form in October 1938. In order to find some solution to the engine problem, the
VG-31 was to use the 632 kW (860 hp)
Hispano-Suiza 12Y-31 and the
VG-32 the
Allison V-1710C-15. The VG-31 flew in 1939 and proved to have excellent performance. The prototype VG-32 was completed in 1940 and awaiting its test flight when it was captured by the advancing
German forces at Villacoublay. The
VG-33 was a modified version of the VG-31 using the same 12Y-31, and first flew on April 25, 1939. It had a surprisingly good performance of 560 km/h (348 mph), and was ordered into production with a contract for 220 aircraft in September, later raised to 1,000. Production did not take long to start, but most of the airframes never received engines and sat at the factory when it fell to the Germans. Further developments continued while the VG-33 production started. The
VG-34 mounted the newer 688 kW (935 hp) 12Y-45, the
VG-36 used the 735 kW (1,000 hp) 12Y-51 originally intended for the
VG-35, and introduced a new streamlined
radiator bath that looked similar to the one on the
P-51 Mustang. Single prototypes of all three were built and flown in early 1940. The
VG-37 was an extended-range version of the -36, while the
VG-38 was to have used the 12Y-77, but neither was built. The last in the series was the
VG-39, originally powered by the new 882 kW (1,200 hp) 12Y-89 using an extension shaft on the propeller to streamline the nose profile, giving the plane an excellent speed of 625 km/h (388 mph) even when loaded down with two more machine guns. The actual production version was to have been the
VG-39bis, powered by the new 1177 kW (1,600 hp)
Hispano-Suiza 12Z-17, using the streamlined radiator intake design from the VG-36. Two more designs were projected, both based on the VG-39bis airframe. The
VG-40 mounted the
Rolls-Royce Merlin III and the
VG-50 the newer Allison V-1710-39. Neither was built. ==Operational history==