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![]() I am not an expert on aerodynamics so I do not know much about the pros & cons of a monoplane vs. a biplane or triplane. I've a re-kindled interest in the Red Baron recently and was looking at a Fokker Triplane replica picts & videos and doing a bit of reading about it's flying characteristics. I have not, however, read much about the "advantage" of 3 wings. I can guess that there would be quite a bit of maneuverability but also a lot of drag. Why a triplane? What are some of it's "advantages?" What are some "disadvantages?" Ricky |
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Ricky wrote:
I am not an expert on aerodynamics so I do not know much about the pros & cons of a monoplane vs. a biplane or triplane. I've a re-kindled interest in the Red Baron recently and was looking at a Fokker Triplane replica picts & videos and doing a bit of reading about it's flying characteristics. I have not, however, read much about the "advantage" of 3 wings. I can guess that there would be quite a bit of maneuverability but also a lot of drag. Why a triplane? What are some of it's "advantages?" What are some "disadvantages?" Ricky The DR1 was the result of many different designers from different countries experimenting with more wings at different aspect ratios trying to get greater maneuverability and rate of climb. You are correct in that they were slow, specifically the DR1 which had a top speed of barely over 100mph. The reason was interference drag between the wings. The maneuverability was excellect in the hands of good drivers, but the ham handed could dent the fabric in a nano-second with this crate. Eventually, the idea for the 3 wings (actually, many airplanes of the period had even more than 3 :-) went the way of all bad ideas as the structural issues in monoplane design began to get solved. Bottom line on the DR1 was that it was something new to be played with by experienced pilots, but the cons outweighed the pros and the damn thing was slow as molasses, so it was eventually canned as a viable weapon. -- Dudley Henriques |
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Ricky wrote:
I am not an expert on aerodynamics so I do not know much about the pros & cons of a monoplane vs. a biplane or triplane. I've a re-kindled interest in the Red Baron recently and was looking at a Fokker Triplane replica picts & videos and doing a bit of reading about it's flying characteristics. I have not, however, read much about the "advantage" of 3 wings. I can guess that there would be quite a bit of maneuverability but also a lot of drag. Why a triplane? What are some of it's "advantages?" What are some "disadvantages?" I think you mentioned the main advantage: maneuverability. Also the British Sopwith Triplane and the German Fokker Dr.I appear to have had good climb rates relative to their biplane counterparts. If you think three wings are something, check our the multiplanes of Horatio Phillips: http://www.centennialofflight.gov/es...lips/DI113.htm |
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John Smith wrote:
In article , Dudley Henriques wrote: The DR1 was the result of many different designers from different countries experimenting with more wings at different aspect ratios trying to get greater maneuverability and rate of climb. You are correct in that they were slow, specifically the DR1 which had a top speed of barely over 100mph. The reason was interference drag between the wings. The maneuverability was excellect in the hands of good drivers, but the ham handed could dent the fabric in a nano-second with this crate. Eventually, the idea for the 3 wings (actually, many airplanes of the period had even more than 3 :-) went the way of all bad ideas as the structural issues in monoplane design began to get solved. Bottom line on the DR1 was that it was something new to be played with by experienced pilots, but the cons outweighed the pros and the damn thing was slow as molasses, so it was eventually canned as a viable weapon. Didn't AIR&SPACE magazine do an article last year with photos showing the interference drag on each will resulting from the others? Not sure. I didn't see it anyway. I know there have been several articles on the DR1 but I'm not really a history buff and I do miss seeing a lot of these things. -- Dudley Henriques |
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On Feb 1, 7:20*pm, John Smith wrote:
In article , *Dudley Henriques wrote: The DR1 was the result of many different designers from different countries experimenting with more wings at different aspect ratios trying to get greater maneuverability and rate of climb. You are correct in that they were slow, specifically the DR1 which had a top speed of barely over 100mph. The reason was interference drag between the wings. The maneuverability was excellect in the hands of good drivers, but the ham handed could dent the fabric in a nano-second with this crate. Eventually, the idea for the 3 wings (actually, many airplanes of the period had even more than 3 :-) went the way of all bad ideas as the structural issues in monoplane design began to get solved. Bottom line on the DR1 was that it was something new to be played with by experienced pilots, but the cons outweighed the pros and the damn thing was slow as molasses, so it was eventually canned as a viable weapon. Didn't AIR&SPACE magazine do an article last year with photos showing the interference drag on each will resulting from the others? Yeah, they did. They said the same things Bertie mentioned. The middle wing was useless due to the interference. Phil |
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On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 00:57:21 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Ricky wrote in news:5f96da3b-7f80-4b6f-aac7- : The Sopwiht had some reasonable level of succes. Sopwith went for it mostly to improve visibviliy, believe it or not. Ironic... knew a guy locally who had a Fokker DR-1 replica. His biggest complaint was how BLIND the plane was. Then again, Sopwith used some fairly narrow-chord wings, and had the pilot sitting back from them. In fact, there are no aerodynamic avantages. None at all. The center plane is almost completely useless. There's a lot of interplane interference with a biplane, though this can be put to some advantage with decalage and stagger. Basically, the one plane influences the other. With a tripe, the top and bottom planes affect the center, which can't be practically spaced from it's neighbors givng it very little lift and effectively neutralising it. One would have thought the Fokker D-6 (essentially a biplane DR-1) would have quickly superseded it, then. But I suppose Fokker finally getting the Mercedes engine let him jump to the bigger D-7. There were actually very few DR1s built. A few hundred IIRC.It would have been forgotten but that Richtofen died in one. Ah, but Werner Voss was first, and established the reputation of the type. He lasted as long as he did, in his last dogfight, because of the maneuverability of the Tripe. OTOH, he might have lived if he'd been flying something that COULD have run away from the SE-5s.... All sides tried them. The Neiuport tripe showed an interesting approach to getting around the interplane interference problems by a multiple stagger approach ( look one up, it;s hard to descibe) http://wwi-cookup.com/dicta_ira/nieuport/triplane01.jpg Ron Wanttaja |
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Ron Wanttaja wrote in
: On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 00:57:21 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Ricky wrote in news:5f96da3b-7f80-4b6f-aac7- : The Sopwiht had some reasonable level of succes. Sopwith went for it mostly to improve visibviliy, believe it or not. Ironic... knew a guy locally who had a Fokker DR-1 replica. His biggest complaint was how BLIND the plane was. Then again, Sopwith used some fairly narrow-chord wings, and had the pilot sitting back from them. Yes, OI understand Sopwith did it for that reason, in fact, I believe, without one in front of me, the the center wing didn't quite reach to he fuselage ging some added vis there. The chord/gap ratio on the Sopwith was considerably larger as well and it had a sharp stagger, so it's middle wing might have actually done a little bit, but Sopwith couldn't have thought all that much of it or he would have made more than the very few he did. Again, i think maybe a few hundred, whereas over 10,000 Camels were built. In fact, there are no aerodynamic avantages. None at all. The center plane is almost completely useless. There's a lot of interplane interference with a biplane, though this can be put to some advantage with decalage and stagger. Basically, the one plane influences the other. With a tripe, the top and bottom planes affect the center, which can't be practically spaced from it's neighbors givng it very little lift and effectively neutralising it. One would have thought the Fokker D-6 (essentially a biplane DR-1) would have quickly superseded it, then. But I suppose Fokker finally getting the Mercedes engine let him jump to the bigger D-7. I don't think the D-6 was quite as good as the Albatros, but it was probably better than the Triplane in most ways. I think the Triplane had it;s limited success as a sort of accident. Fokker was fond of just grabbing bits they had developed and grafting them to other bits and then lengthening this, shortening that until he came up with something that worked. I have a two inch thick book of everything the Germans built in WW1 including all the experimentals and the Fokker creations are just nuts. I have the book out now and the tandem wing triplane is the V8. I had remembered it as a tandem triplane, but the rear set were bipe wings. Way too narrow a gap between the planes in the back. And it still has a stab! There's a few pics on the net, but this guy obviously has a fetish for tripes and you can see several as well as a Wight Quadraplane and the Neiuport Triplane. http://www.wwi-models.org/Images/Werner/RC/index.html There were actually very few DR1s built. A few hundred IIRC.It would have been forgotten but that Richtofen died in one. Ah, but Werner Voss was first, and established the reputation of the type. He lasted as long as he did, in his last dogfight, because of the maneuverability of the Tripe. OTOH, he might have lived if he'd been flying something that COULD have run away from the SE-5s.... Yeah, Werner Voss's was one of the prototypes. His wasn't a DR1, but a F1, sort of a production prototype. Not a lot of diffrence between that and the DR-1 production aircraft, though. All the big name German aces wanted one when it came out first. It was sort of a weapon of choice. A kind of fad-ish status symbol. The first prototype of the Triplane, the V3, had no interplane struts at all, and no balance area on the ailerons. The wings were fully cantilever and the struts were added to boost pilot confidence more than anything else. At least one or two of the F1s lost the upper wing in flight with a fatal crash ensuing. I always loved the japanese kite face on Voss's airplane. One last bit of DR1 lore is that Manfred von Richtofen had four of them. He also preferred the French Gnome engine over the Oberursel whaich was basically a copy of the Gnome anyway. His airplanes were all equipped with Gnomes captured form downed airplanes. There's a raging debate amongst WW1 nerds about the color schemes of his aircraft. The standard on the DR1 was to cover it in blue fabric and then paing the upper sides with a worn out brush in a mix of silver and olive in a diagonal streaky way giving a sort of camoflage. Richtofen, of course, painted his red, but each of his airplanes had a different degree of red on it. The one he died in seems to have been the reddest, but it may have been only the upper surface of the upper wing ( there is a phot of that airplane with him in it before his death) and another with all upper surfaces red. There is a poor photo of one tha appears to be a solid color, but it might be that in the shade, the blue bottom may just appear to be the same shade as the top. The debate rages on! Without me, I might add. I'm just glad those guys are out there doing it for me. All sides tried them. The Neiuport tripe showed an interesting approach to getting around the interplane interference problems by a multiple stagger approach ( look one up, it;s hard to descibe) http://wwi-cookup.com/dicta_ira/nieuport/triplane01.jpg Cool eh? They knoew how to fudge an airplane back then! Bertie |
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Phil J wrote in
: On Feb 1, 7:20*pm, John Smith wrote: In article , *Dudley Henriques wrote: The DR1 was the result of many different designers from different countries experimenting with more wings at different aspect ratios trying to get greater maneuverability and rate of climb. You are correct in that they were slow, specifically the DR1 which had a top speed of barely over 100mph. The reason was interference drag between the wings. The maneuverability was excellect in the hands of good drivers, but the ham handed could dent the fabric in a nano-second with this crate. Eventually, the idea for the 3 wings (actually, many airplanes of the period had even more than 3 :-) went the way of all bad ideas as the structural issues in monoplane design began to get solved. Bottom line on the DR1 was that it was something new to be played with by experienced pilots, but the cons outweighed the pros and the damn thing was slow as molasses, so it was eventually canned as a viable weap on. Didn't AIR&SPACE magazine do an article last year with photos showing the interference drag on each will resulting from the others? Yeah, they did. They said the same things Bertie mentioned. The middle wing was useless due to the interference. Yeah, to be fair a lot of what I said was form that article. IIRC they did a computer analysis of the Fokker and found it wanting. Bertie |
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![]() After reading more on this I have found that the German's were very concerned with the ability of their aircraft to get above the enemy as quickly as possible. An attack from above (especially from out of the sun), was found to be an extremely effective method of victory. The amount of lift generated from 3 wings was found to enhance climb performance quite significantly, thus affording German pilots the abilty to attack from above as was desired. Ricky |
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