Baen Avionics

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Baen Avionics
Native name
Baen Aeirbreach
Company typePrivate
IndustryAeronautics Design and Manufacture
Founded1927
FounderKenneth Baen
Headquarters
Area served
Worldwide
SubsidiariesBaen Air International

Baen Avionics is an aircraft design and production company based in Faneria and active in both the military procurement and civilian flight spheres. Founded in 1927 as a military aircraft producer, Baen designs, builds, and sells civilian and military craft direct-to-consumer, to airline companies, and directly to the Fhainnin government and approved foreign states. Due to its recent predominance in the Fhainnin military market, expansion into air transit through Baen Air International, its continued production of luxury supersonic transport and cargo aircraft, and its large helicopter sector, Baen Avionics with its subsidiaries included is the fourth largest aircraft company in the world by income; it additionally controls a large section of the world rotor aircraft market.

Baen is known for it proclivity towards experimental aircraft designs such as delta wing, variable sweep wing, and flying wing aircraft, particularly in its role as a military supplier. It currently supplies several larger sweep-wing aircraft to the Fhainnin government as well as heavy strike drones, though it has shied away from variable-geometry airframes since the 1980s due to the cumulative additional maintenance associated with a large fleet of sweep-wing craft. The state-owned company Ginearált Aeirbreach is the other major supplier of Fhainnin military aircraft, and the two companies have competed bitterly for contracts since the production of Baen's modern line of delta-wing air superiority fighters soundly defeated GA's interceptor jet program.

Baen Air International

In addition to production, Baen Avionics owns Baen International, a subsidiary consumer air travel company that operates in the northern hemisphere and select regions in the southern hemisphere, namely Sarpedon.

Products

Number Series

Baen Avionics numbers its projects with serial numbers such as 'BA-1.101', where 'BA-1' denotes the type of aircraft as well as shorthand for the company name. As such, single-propeller planes are listed under BA-1; later categories include BA-2 (Twin-engine propeller craft), BA-3 (airships, never produced), BA-4 (three- or four-propeller airframes), BA-5 (Rocket or later Jet-powered aircraft), BA-6 (A separate designation for cargo and airliner craft), BA-7 (rotor aircraft), and BA-8 (Space-launch vehicles, not yet produced). Each plan to reach a finished state was given a serial number, initially consisting of three digits, and later expanded to four.

Prewar and Wartime Aircraft

BA-1.103 Oalkbaet

(Morane-Saulnier MS.227)

The Oalkbet, named for a township Baen visited in Hendalarsk, was the first aircraft commissioned by the Fhainnin military from BA. While proving difficult to maintain, it was easily adaptable into a floatplane variant and was accepted by the Navy as a result. The frame featured an experimental engine which proved tempermental.

BA-1.107

BA-2.105 'Dart'

(PZL.38 Wilk)

BA-2.118 'Gallop'

(Bristol Beaufort)

BA-1.122

(Payen 22/101)

BA-5.413

(Payen 112)

BA-4.129

(Northrop YB-35)

Postwar Aircraft

(Hirsch H.100)

.

(Mirage 2000)

.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Modern Aircraft

BA-300s were introduced with the advent of jet and later turbofan engines, and similarly feature fixed-wing aircraft. The BA-300s were envisioned as large passenger planes and continue to persist as Baen's main line of civilian transit craft, and additionally have found roles in military transport and cargo flight roles. Currently, the BA-331 and BA-337 are the most commonly used 300-series craft, with plans to expand the range with the expected BA-345 Globemaster.

The BA-403 was an experimental supersonic delta-wing civilian aircraft which failed to attract international attention due to its high requirements for maintenance and avante-garde design theory. Later models such as the BA-412 serve a niche role for business transit, organ transport, and other high-cost, high-speed transport applications.