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Encyclopedia > Fokker Triplane
Fokker Dr. I
image:Fokker Dr.I.jpg
Single-seat fighter and reconnaissance plane
Powerplant
One Oberursel Ur. II rotary piston engine
Dimensions
Length 5.77 m
Wingspan 7.20 m
Height 2.95 m
Wing area 18.70
Weights
Empty 406 kg
Maximum take-off 585 kg
Performance
Maximum speed 165 km/h
Operative range unknown
Service ceiling 6095 m
Armament
Machine guns two, fixed

The Fokker Dr.I Dreidecker was a World War I fighter aircraft built by the company of Anthony Fokker, used by Germany. It became most famous as the plane of the Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen.


The Dr.I was mainly designed by Anthony Fokker and Reinhold Platz (although Chefingenieur Möser has been credited with a role), who had been working on a series of experimental planes, the V-series, since 1916. They shared one feature in common, the use of cantilever wings instead of external wire bracing. This led to significantly lower drag, but it also required stronger internal structures in the wing, reducing the advantage. In order to address this, his V.3 design had used three shorter wings instead of two wider ones, so that the loads on any particular wing were reduced and would require less internal structure. In testing, the wings tended to vibrate, so the design was modified with single struts between the wings at the tips, leading to the V.4.


In testing the V.4 ? which had a doped fabric-covered tubular steel fuselage and tail and wooden wings ? proved to be something of a disappointment. Although the handling was fairly good due to the low angular momentum of the short wings, several modifications were made to improve it, notably the control feel. The main concern was the speed, however: the added wing made the drag high enough that the puny 110hp Oberursel UR.II engine could not drive it to the speeds of then-current Allied aircraft, and Platz introduced a number of V planes with larger engines in an attempt to address this. Platz later turned back to biplane designs for further developments in the V series.


In April 1917 the RNAS started flying their Sopwith Triplanes on the front-line in force for the first time. Their debut was sensational, for the first time turning the tables completely on the Germans and proving to be almost untouchable in combat. Soon the German pilots were clamouring for a triplane of their own. The majority of the German aircraft manufacturers responded with new triplane designs, but most, like the Albatros Dr.I, were nothing more than biplanes with a new wing added. The V.4 however was a purpose-built triplane, well tested and ready for production. Unsurprisingly, Fokker's design won the contract. The first pre-production examples (F.Is) were ready by the middle of August 1917 and production machines (Dr.Is) were delivered in October of the same year.


Two of the first three F.Is (103/17 and 102/17) were shipped to Werner Voss and Manfred von Richthofen on August 28th 1917 at Marcke in Belgium. Soon both were flying them in combat and racking up successes, exploiting the aircraft's unique ability to perform flat slip-turns, thanks to the absence of a fixed vertical stabiliser. Triplane 102/17 was shot down whilst being flown by Kurt Wolff on 15th September, and 103/17 flown by Werner Voss on 23rd September. However, many of the other pilots were less impressed with the aircraft, while it had good manoeuvrability and an impressive rate of climb, the plane was still slower than most contemporary Allied fighters.


In late October 1917 Leutnants Heinrich Gontermann and Günther Pastor were killed when their Dr.Is broke up in the air at the end of October, and the planes were withdrawn from service. Modifications were then made to the wings for added strength, but the failures continued in service and the triplane never recovered in the eyes of the pilots, and was not supplied to many Jagdstaffeln.


The cause of the wing failures was said to be from poor quality control rather than deficiencies in design. However, the failures always occurred in the upper wing of the aircraft. In 1929, NACA investigations found that the upper wing carried a higher wing loading than the lower wing, at high speeds it could be 2.55 times as much.


Manfred von Richthofen flew a variety of Dr.Is, at least one of which (425/17) was completely red, whilst another (152/17) survived until World War II in Berlin.


Production eventually ended in May 1918, by which time only 320 had been manufactured.


Variants

  • V3 - Initial prototype
  • V4 - First production prototype
  • V5 - Fitted with a Goebel Goe.III engine
  • V6 - Larger version, with a Mercedes D.II engine
  • V7 - Fitted with a Siemens-Halske Sh.III engine
  • V8 - Variant of the V6 with different wing-configuration
  • V9 - Biplane version with a Oberursel U.0 engine
  • V10 - Fitted with a Oberursel Ur.III engine

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  Results from FactBites:
 
Fokker Triplane Flight Characteristics (1787 words)
The first thing you notice about a Triplane is that it is definitely a "rudder" airplane and you have to keep on the pedals constantly to keep the ball in the center of the slip-skid indicator.
The Triplane tends to fly tail heavy and increasing speed requires lots of forward stick to hold the nose down~ It appears as if the effective center of drag is above the thrust line so the faster you go the more elevator correction is needed to hold the nose down.
All the wings are rigged at 11/20 angle of incidence.
Fokker - Search Results - MSN Encarta (184 words)
Anthony Herman Gerard Fokker was born in Kediri,...
Fokker was a Dutch aircraft manufacturer named after its founder, Anthony Fokker.
The Fokker F100 is a small twin-turbofan regional airliner from the Fokker company.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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