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Also known as flaming death traps.made of highly flammable wood and with the gliding capacity of a...

Date post: 19-Jan-2018
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Early planes were not very fast, so they had difficulty generating “lift”….a single wing had to be quite long and deep to provide lift, but often this meant they were not very agile…aircraft designers soon learned that you could generate more lift and maneuverability with more wings… Albatross monoplane (German) Fokker Dr 1 triplane (German) Niueport Biplane (French)

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Also known as flaming death traps.made of highly flammable wood and canvas.and with the gliding capacity of a medium sized stone.and slow.with no bullet- proofing.and no parachutesyeahsounds like fun Aviation was fairly new and there was a lot of experimentation with new designs as the war went onthere were some design dead-ends and each side in the war periodically gained advantages and then subsequently lost them as their opponents caught up and then surpassed them. Sopwith Camel: very quick and agile but difficult to fly (British) SE 5a: Billy Bishops main plane.very stable and sturdy plane(British) Early planes were not very fast, so they had difficulty generating lift.a single wing had to be quite long and deep to provide lift, but often this meant they were not very agileaircraft designers soon learned that you could generate more lift and maneuverability with more wings Albatross monoplane (German) Fokker Dr 1 triplane (German) Niueport Biplane (French) As the war continued, more and more planes were developed Albatross Biplane (German) Sopwith Triplane (British)Both sides came to realize that three wings maximized the amount of lift to give a greater rate of climb, and increased the agility of the plane Early in the war, planes were used to drop bombs on industrial targets like factories. Smaller fighter planes could not carry very big bombs or very many bombs, so it was not too long before both sides started to develop large purpose-built bombers designed to deliver large payloads to their targets. These planes could carry large loads but they were quite slow and were easy targets for fighter planes Large British twin engined bomber (notice the gunners cockpit at the front?) German Gotha bomber(this planes engines are pushers with the propellers at the back of the engines) At the beginning of the war a German count named Von Zeppelin invented the airship or dirigible a huge flying ship that could deliver massive bomb loads to foreign targets. Dirigibles could carry far more bombs than any plane and had a tremendous range, but they were filled with highly flammable gas and had little defense against fighter planes armed with incendiary bullets During the war, several young pilots developed the tactics for the new method of aerial warfare. The Germans Max Immelman and Oswald Boelke were the innovators of many methods of hunting opposition planes. They developed the Flying Circus a group of planes flying together and trained in group tactics. Both men were superb pilots but neither survived more than a few years. Immelman with his plane. Oswald Boelkeone of the great innovators. Like so many others, Immelmans talent and luck could only protect him for so longalmost nobody could survive a World War One plane crash The greatest Ace of the war was the German aristocrat Baron Manfred Von Richtoffen, better known as the Red Baron because he flew a bight red Fokker triplane he wanted his enemies to know who he was He shot down 80 planes before his luck ran out shot through the lungs by an Australian machine-gunner while chasing the Canadian pilot Wop May. For years it was thought that Canadian Roy Brown had shot him down, but recent evidence makes this very unlikely Canadian Billy Bishop ended the war with 72 kills the third highest number of planes shot down but Bishop managed to survive the war unscathed.Unlike many other aces, Bishop often preferred to hunt alone. Although he wasnt a great pilot, he was an unbelievable shot and had nerves of steelThe Germans called him Hells Handmaiden.Canadians played a dominant role in Britains Royal Flying Corpsby the end of the war over a third of all British pilots were actually Canadians Bishops SE 5a of the Royal Flying Corps Squadron 60


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