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#21
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#22
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Ricky wrote:
On Feb 2, 4:40 pm, Matt Whiting wrote: Ricky wrote: 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. I really doubt that was the reason as lift can easily be increased in a number of ways other than adding wings. I think structural strength was the primary reason for more wings in that era. Matt Well, hey, that's what I read from a guy who spent years of research on the Fokker Triplane and then built one himself from scratch. Maybe he's mistaken? I doubt it. I don't. If triplanes were more efficient we would see modern versions of them. Matt |
#23
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Matt Whiting wrote in
: Ricky wrote: On Feb 2, 4:40 pm, Matt Whiting wrote: Ricky wrote: 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. I really doubt that was the reason as lift can easily be increased in a number of ways other than adding wings. I think structural strength was the primary reason for more wings in that era. Matt Well, hey, that's what I read from a guy who spent years of research on the Fokker Triplane and then built one himself from scratch. Maybe he's mistaken? I doubt it. I don't. If triplanes were more efficient we would see modern versions of them. Well, in a way you do. Double slotted fowler flaps.... Bertie |
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Ricky wrote:
On Feb 2, 4:40 pm, Matt Whiting wrote: Ricky wrote: 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. I really doubt that was the reason as lift can easily be increased in a number of ways other than adding wings. I think structural strength was the primary reason for more wings in that era. Matt Well, hey, that's what I read from a guy who spent years of research on the Fokker Triplane and then built one himself from scratch. Maybe he's mistaken? I doubt it. I'd be curious to see his research. It seems quite counter to every other authoritative source I've seen such as: http://www.airspacemag.com/issues/20...ron.php?page=1 Care to post your research source? Matt |
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On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 09:44:56 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip
wrote: 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 there are original sections of the red triplane's fabric on display in the Canberra War Memorial, Australia. Stealth Pilot |
#26
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Stealth Pilot wrote in
news ![]() On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 09:44:56 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: 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 there are original sections of the red triplane's fabric on display in the Canberra War Memorial, Australia. Oh there's no question they all had loads of red on them. It's how much. These guys would have made pilgrimages to the fabric, believe me! The one he died in was supposed to be the "all red" one, but there;s some question if the undersurfaces were still the clear doped blue fabric. Any souvenier hunters would naturally want the red parts, so anything else was probably left on the airplane. Bertie |
#27
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On Feb 3, 6:51 am, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
FledgeIII wrote : On Feb 2, 7:41 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: FledgeIII wrote innews:7921eb53-dcc7-4bce-984a- om: On Feb 2, 4:38 pm, Ron Wanttaja wrote: On Sat, 2 Feb 2008 09:44:56 +0000 (UTC), Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Ron Wanttaja wrote in : 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 heard once that Tony Fokker (a Dutch national) was somehow under suspicion by the German government, and the military had refused to give him access to the newest engines...so he designed the best fighters he could around an old one until the Germans changed their minds. I always loved the japanese kite face on Voss's airplane. Back in the '60s, DC Comics had a series about a German WWI pilot called "Enemy Ace," which was based on Richtofen. But "Hans Von Hammer's" all-red triplane featured Voss' kite face, as shown on the current image on my Fly Baby's baggage door: http://www.bowersflybaby.com/pix/enemy%20ace.jpg 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. Well, uhhh, maybe. I'd heard that Oberursel sometimes put Gnome data plates on its engines, with an additional plate explaining it was a "captured" engine. Even in the middle of a war, they were worried about licensing laws.... Thanks for the info about von Richtofen's four DR-1s. Back as a kid building models, I noticed that none of the sources seemed to agree as to whether his machine was all-red or otherwise. Having more than one airplane would explain it.... Ron Wanttaja In one out of the way corner in the WWI section of the USAF Museum, there's a couple-inch square swatch of doped fabric in a frame, purported to be from the DR.I Richtofen died in. It's actually kind of a magenta color, but there's certain to be some fading involved... Yeah, it was ripped to shreds by souvenier hunters. Some if it is in Canada in a museum there including the seat. One of his tripes was preserved and displayed in a museum in germany, but it was destroyed in a bombing raid during the war. Bertie I also seem to recall reading someplace or other that one of - if not primary - motivations with tripes was to decrease span without sacrificing wing area - shortening the moments to increase roll and yaw rates. Yeah, that would be one of the reasons. Bipes are the same lots of wing area but you're affecting a smaller body of air. If you look at an airplane nose on and draw a circel around it which just touches the wingtips, you have a rough idea of the volume of air influenced by the airplane as it flies along. A bipe or tripe will affect a smaller area. It's morre compicated than that, of course, but it's a good ROT Kind of squares with stories of how guys like Voss flew the thing - bat**** crazy; flat turns, snap rolls, you name it. Yeah I read a report on a modern one years ago and apparently it's yaw behaviour is very strange indeed. He said it was nearly impossible to tell if you were skidding as the thing would just fly along with the wings level and the ailerons neutral and going mare sideways than straight ahead. You had to be on the rudder all the time. Vigorous application of the rudder would initiate mad flat turns of ridiculously small radius,whihc apparently made the thing a very good gun platform. It must have been a tremedous advantage in surprise terms alone. Another thing I recall reading was that it offered some advantages in visibility - high aspect ratio (narrow chord)/low stagger wings, the middle wing aligned right on line of sight where it obscured the least lateral vision. Then again, I could be all wt on that... ![]() As Dudley said, I believe you're completely blind on landing, but all the bipes of tha era had vis issues. There were some weird experiments n that direction as well. The DH5 used negative stagger and had the cockpit in front of the wings, for instance. The Sopwith Dolphin had a weird aproach that's hard to describe. Bertie Yeah I read a report on a modern one years ago and apparently it's yaw behaviour is very strange indeed. He said it was nearly impossible to tell if you were skidding as the thing would just fly along with the wings level and the ailerons neutral and going mare sideways than straight ahead. You had to be on the rudder all the time. Vigorous application of the rudder would initiate mad flat turns of ridiculously small radius,whihc apparently made the thing a very good gun platform. It must have been a tremedous advantage in surprise terms alone. Wouldn't be surprised if that's the reason pictures from the time - and later on in movies like The Blue Max show DR.Is with streamers trailing from the interplanes; most likely as big 'ole honkin' yaw strings... Good point on the early D.VII fuselage; was thinking about that myself. IIRC, the prototype had the same small "comma shaped" rudder stab as the DR.I; they added the forward strake/fin when they lengthened the fuselage. |
#28
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On Feb 3, 8:06*am, Matt Whiting wrote:
Ricky wrote: On Feb 2, 4:40 pm, Matt Whiting wrote: Ricky wrote: 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. I really doubt that was the reason as lift can easily be increased in a number of ways other than adding wings. *I think structural strength was the primary reason for more wings in that era. Matt Well, hey, that's what I read from a guy who spent years of research on the Fokker Triplane and then built one himself from scratch. Maybe he's mistaken? I doubt it. I'd be curious to see his research. *It seems quite counter to every other authoritative source I've seen such as: http://www.airspacemag.com/issues/20.../red_baron.php... Care to post your research source? Matt- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Wasn't research exactly, just the builder/owner of a "Fokker" Triplane commenting on his own research into the plane. He's Canadian, I think, and built one from the ground up with a partner, then sold it in the early 80s. I think it was on Youtube, lemme see if I can find it again. Ricky |
#30
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On Feb 3, 8:06*am, Matt Whiting wrote:
Care to post your research source? Matt- Sure, here it is; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Arcvl...eature=related Since this guy is a pilot of a modern replica and, I believe, built the one he's sitting in and standing next to, I took his comments about the 3 wings as somewhat authoratative. This is a good little ditty about the Triplane. Ricky. |
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