Talleres Loring
IndustryAeronautics, defence
PredecessorLoring Pujol y Cia
Founded1923
FounderJorge Loring Martinez
Defunct1934
FateBankruptcy
SuccessorAeronáutica Industrial S.A.
Headquarters
Spain
ProductsAircraft
Loring R-1 of the Aeronáutica Militar ca. 1927
The Loring R-3, last model built for Aeronáutica Militar.

Talleres Loring (Loring Workshops) was a Spanish aeronautical company founded by engineer and entrepreneur Jorge Loring after moving to Madrid.

History

A predecessor company, Loring Pujol y Cia, had been founded in Barcelona by Jorge Loring together with Claudio Baradat Guillé in 1918.

The new company established its factory in Cuatro Vientos, Carabanchel, in SW Madrid in 1923 and began production in 1924.[1] It soon received orders to manufacture military aircraft, beginning with Fokker C.IV planes.[2] Later Talleres Loring would build some of Juan de la Cierva's autogyro prototypes,[3] such as the Cierva C.7 and Cierva C.12.

Talleres Loring also would produce its own aircraft, mostly designed by engineer Eduardo Barrón, such as the Loring R-1, the Loring R-2 and the Loring R-3 airplanes. Overwhelmed by the large financial cost of its projects, in 1931 Jorge Loring rejoined the government service. Three years later, in 1934, the Talleres Loring company filed for bankruptcy. Jorge Loring was bailed out by his brother and founded Aeronáutica Industrial S.A. (AISA), which also manufactured aircraft for military use, and where he was found dead on 22 September 1936, at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War.[1]

The Loring RB surveillance aircraft, a monoplane prototype said to have been built right at the beginning in 1923, and the T-2 are developments about which there are almost no data.[1][4]

List of Aircraft

Under licence

References

  1. ^ a b c Ateneo - Jorge Loring Martinez
  2. ^ Una vida en el aire
  3. ^ Jorge Loring: vuelo por todo lo alto
  4. ^ Manuel Lage, Hispano-Suiza 1904-1972 – Hombres, empresas, motores y aviones, LID, 2003, ISBN 8488717296
  5. ^ Loring E-1: “Two are better than one”
  6. ^ José Warleta Carrillo, Eduardo Barrón y Ramos de Sotomayor, Aeroplano no 6, 1989
  7. ^ Birth, first steps and pre-war planes of the Spanish Military Aviation
  8. ^ Warleta Carrillo, José (1989). «Revista Aeroplano nº 6». In Instituto de Historia y Cultura Aeronáutica. Eduardo Barrón y Ramos de Sotomayor. Madrid. p. 64.