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Colomban MC-12 Cri-Cri

on MAY 28, 2020 (HTTPS://WWW.BAMHURN.ORG/2020/05/28/)

Technical Data
Length: 12 ft 10 in / 3.9m
Height: 5ft / 1.52m
Wing Span: 16 ft 1 in / 4.9 m
Service Ceiling: 12,100 ft / 3,700m

Max Speed: 140 mph / 220kmh


Max Weight: 375 lbs / 170 kg
Seating Capacity: One
Engines: 2 x JPX PUL 212 single-cylinder piston engines, 11 kW (15 hp) each

Our Aircraft
Colomban MC-12 Cri-Cri G-BOUT / N120JN (cn 12-0135) was built in 1983-86 by James Nelson of
Wisconsin from plans supplied by Colomban. It was registered N120JN on 18 January 1985 and
placed on the American Experimental Aircraft Category. It appears little flying was undertaken and
the Cri-Cri was shipped to England in June 1988 for a Potters Bar owner who registered it as G-
BOUT. However, the registration does not seem to have been applied as it appeared at the 1989
Popular Flying Association Rally still as N120JN. After that date the Cri-Cri’s history remains
unknown, so it is not certain if it flew again.
Privacy - Terms
N120N resurfaced in the spring of 2011 when it placed up a tree by the entrance of a builder’s yard
near Dorchester — the owner deciding it could act as a Gate Guard to his yard. He had discovered
that it was about to be scrapped and luckily decided that it was worth saving. In the spring of 2016
it was bought by a new owner and moved to Devon for “restoration to fly”! It later moved to Sussex
but the owner decided that restoration was too much of a task and in April 2019 put N120JN for
sale. It failed to reach its reserve price, so the Bournemouth Aviation Museum stepped in to
purchase it. The Cri-Cri arrived at the Museum in May 2019 in pieces and has now been lovingly
restored by two of the Museum volunteers. It is displayed with its ‘unused’ British registration.

Type History
The Colomban Cri-Cri is the smallest twin-engined manned aircraft in the world, designed in the
early 1970s by French aeronautical engineer Michael Colomban. The name Cri-Cri comes from the
nickname of Christine, one of Colomban’s daughters. Cri-cri’ ‘or ‘cricri’ is also the French term for the
sound of a cricket or a cicada, or an informal name for the insects themselves, but it is unclear if
this double meaning was intended by Colomban himself.

The Cri-Cri features a cantilever low-wing, a single-seat enclosed cockpit under a bubble canopy,
fixed tricycle landing gear and twin engines mounted on pylons to the nose of the aircraft in tractor
configuration. The aircraft is made from aluminium sheet glued to Klegecell foam. Despite its small
size the Cri-Cri is acrobatic and the pilot is provided with a cockpit canopy! The downside is that
pilots find the fuel tank situated between their legs!

The early Cri-Cri aircraft were powered by two 15 hp twin stroke engines as standard, but the later
MC-15 is fitted with 18 hp engines. These show their improvement when undertaking aerobatics. As
a ‘fun’ aircraft the Cri-Cri had a speed of 185 kmh but limited range. Colomban supplies plans to
would be constructors, with an estimated cost of $15,000/17,500 to complete. As well as home
interest, Canada, Great Britain and the United States proved popular for Cri-Cri constructors.

(https://www.bamhurn.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Cr-Cri-up-a-

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Contact Us
Bournemouth Aviation
Charitable Foundation
Merritown Lane, Hurn
Christchurch, Dorset
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 +44 (0)1202 473141
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Open Daily All Year.
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Winter [GMT] 10.00 to 16.00*
Closed on Christmas Day & Boxing Day
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