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Albatros D.III: Johannisthal, OAW, and Oeffag variants - 13

Miller, James F.Miller, James F.(Illustrated by)Morshead(Illustrated by)Tooby, Adam(Illustrated by)
Part of the Air Vanguard series
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In 1916 German aerial domination, once held sway by rotary-engined Fokker and Pfalz E-type wing-warping monoplanes, had been lost to the more nimble French Nieuports and British DH 2s which not only out-flew the German fighters but were present in greater numbers.

Born-from-experience calls from German fighter pilots requested that, rather than compete with the maneuverability of these adversaries, new single-engine machines should be equipped with higher horsepower engines and armed with two rather than the then-standard single machine gun.

The Robert Thelen-led Albatros design bureau set to work on what became the Albatros D.I and D.II and by April 1916, they had developed a sleek yet rugged machine that featured the usual Albatros semi-monocoque wooden construction and employed a 160hp Mercedes D.III engine with power enough to equip the aeroplane with two forward-firing machine guns.

In all, 500 D.IIIs and 840 D.III(OAW)s were produced and saw heavy service throughout 1917.

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Product Details
Osprey
1472807928 / 9781472807922
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
20/03/2014
United Kingdom
English
66 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%