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Red Baron Historical Study Notes: Albatros D.Va the Red Baron's "forgotten" fighter Introduced over the western front in August 1917, the Fokker Triplane soon became the favorite plane of Germany's greatest WWI ace, Baron Manfred von Richthofen. Baron Von Richthofen was the most celebrated
of the German Aces. He shot down a total of 80 planes. He won
the Blue Max Air Medal on Jan 12 1917. The Barron was Killed in Action
on on April 21 1918 by Captain A. Roy Brown, from Canada, flying a Sopwith
Camel
Richthofen was part of the JG-1 Fighter Wing
which on March 1918 as part of Ludendorffs massive thrust very nearly
decided the war. Speed: 115 mph at sea level
The Fokker Dr-1 Triplane was the most well
known of the WW1 airplanes. It was slow and difficult to fly yet
it deadly in the hands of an experienced pilot. This is the plane
was flown by the famous Baron Manfred Von Richthofen. One of the
flight features of this airplane was that it was able to momentarily hang
on its prop and shoot straight up into the belly of its enemies airplane.
The Fokker D.VII is widely regarded as the best German
aircraft of the war and was first test-flown by Manfred von Richthofen, the Red
Baron.
The Camel was perhaps the best Allied fighter of WWI,
successfully downing 1,924 aircraft in only 16 months of fighting. It was known
for being extremely agile and for having a fast rate of climb, and perhaps most
notably, the great Baron von Richthofen fell to the guns of a 209 Squadron RAF
Camel flown by Canadian Roy Brown in 1918
Jasta 11. The Fokker Dr.I triplane
gained fame for being the aircraft in which 80-victory ace Manfred von
Richthofen, the legendary "Red Baron," achieved his last 17 victories
before being killed on April 21, 1918.
Dr.I flown by von Richthofen features
fabric-covered wings with visible ribs; Spandau IMG 08 machine guns
mounted in front of the well-appointed cockpit; an intricate
9-cylinder rotary engine with a rotating propelle from 1918: Manfred von Richthofen - the "Red Baron" (80
victories, JG 1), Josef Jacobs (48, Jasta 7), Rudolf Klimke (17, Jasta 27) and
Hermann Gring (22, Jasta 27). Sopwith Camel flown by Capt. Roy Brown when he chased Baron Manfred von
Richthofen over the Somme on April 21, 1918 - the flight from which the
famous "Red Baron" did not return 180 HP six-cylinder Mercedes-Benz motor April 20, 1918. Baron Manfred Von Richthofen
was his flying Fokker Dr.1 on early evening patrol, had already shot down
one Sopwith Camel when he found his 80th victim flying another Sopwith
Camel flown by Lieutenant D. G. Lewis, 19 years old. Lewis' plane
was on fire all the way to the ground, amazingly he was thrown clear
of the burning wreckage and survived the crash. Manfred von Richthofen, the legendary Red
Barron, made history in the Great War with his red Fokker
airplane. Introduced in June 1917, it was the most maneuverable
aircraft of the time.
Manfred von Richthofen, the "ace of
aces," managed 80 confirmed kills over World War I Europe, peaking
during the "Red April" of 1917 when he racked up an incredible 22
victories. Then Britain's Sopwith Triplane appeared over the
horizon, and suddenly the Red Baron was put to the ultimate test:
gunsight-to-gunsight combat with a vastly superior aircraft. In July of 1917, Manfred von
Richthofen - the Red Baron - tangles with Sopwith Camels in the
skies over Belgium.
Speed: 115 mph at sea level
The Fokker Dr-1 Triplane was the most well
known of the WW1 airplanes. It was slow and difficult to fly yet
it deadly in the hands of an experienced pilot. This is the plane
was flown by the famous Baron Manfred Von Richthofen. One of the
flight features of this airplane was that it was able to momentarily hang
on its prop and shoot straight up into the belly of its enemies airplane.
the Sopwith Camel flown by Capt. Roy Brown when he chased Baron Manfred von
Richthofen over the Somme on April 21, 1918 - the flight from which the
famous "Red Baron" did not return.
Canadair
F-86 Sabre flown by 352-victory ace Col. Erich Hartmann of JG 71 Richthofen, West
German Air Force, during the Cold War
The Camel was perhaps the best Allied fighter of WWI,
successfully downing 1,924 aircraft in only 16 months of fighting. It was known
for being extremely agile and for having a fast rate of climb, and perhaps most
notably, the great Baron von Richthofen fell to the guns of a 209 Squadron RAF
Camel flown by Canadian Roy Brown in 1918 |
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Copyright Dates: 03/03/12
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