It was designed prior to the outbreak of the Second World War to operate from the aircraft carriers of the French Navy, but only a single example was completed, with development ended by France's defeat by Germany in June 1940.
[1] SNCAM's design, the Dewoitine D.750 was a low-winged monoplane of all-metal stressed skin construction, powered by two Renault 12R air-cooled V12 engines.
The fuselage, of similar layout to the competing SNCAO CAO.600 housed the crew of two or three required by the specification in separate cockpits.
The radio operator/gunner sat aft of the wing, operating Darne machine guns in dorsal and ventral positions.
[2] Two prototypes of the D.750 were ordered by the French Air Ministry on 26 June 1939,[1] the first example making its maiden flight on 6 May 1940 with SNCAM's chief test pilot Marcel Doret at the controls.