Caudron C.60

The Caudron C.60 was a French, two-seat biplane with a single engine and a canvas-covered fuselage of the 1920s and 1930s. The French aircraft manufacturer Caudron developed this aircraft from the Caudron C.59. It was mainly used as a trainer aircraft.

The Caudron C.60 was used in France, Finland, Latvia, and in Venezuela.

Finland
The Finnish Air Force purchased 30 Caudron C.60s from France in 1923. A further 34 aircraft were license built in Finland between 1927-1928. The Finnish Air Force had a total of 64 64 Caudron C.60s. The French-manufactured aircraft carried the codes 1E20 - 1E30 and 1F31 - 1F49, and later CA-20 - CA-9. The Finnish-manufactured ones carried the codes CA-61 - CA-94.

The aircraft was in use between 1923-1936.

Operators

 * Finnish Air Force
 * French Air Force
 * 🇱🇻 Latvia
 * Latvian Navy
 * 🇪🇸 Spain
 * Spanish Republican Air Force
 * Venezuelan Air Force
 * Spanish Republican Air Force
 * Venezuelan Air Force
 * Venezuelan Air Force

Survivors
The Finnish Aviation Museum in Vantaa has one of the Finnish-manufactured C.60s (CA-84)