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D-EWWI Fokker DR.I c/n 20002643 - 'Luftstreitkrafte 425/17' - Verkehrslandeplatz Ballenstedt-Harz in Germany - 9 June 2024 oldtimers biplanes

In the development of aviation the military scene played a major rule. Already during WWI the early aeroplanes became reliable and easy to fly as they had to when they became war-machines, produced in large numbers. The 1993-built Fokker DR.I1 PH-DRI is a replica of the original single-seat Fokker DR-1 Dreidecker fighter that played a major rule in the last year of WWI. In February 1917, the Sopwith Triplane began to appear in service with the Royal Navy Air Service (RNAS) over the Western Front and swiftly proved itself superior due to its high rate of climb and its agility to the more heavily armed Albatros fighters then in use by the Luftstreitkräfte. Fokker-Flugzeugwerke responded by converting the unfinished Fokker V.4 prototype, a cantilever triplane with unbalanced ailerons and elevators, designed by Reinhold Platz. During the tests of its predecessor, the V.3 prototype of the first Fokker triplane, there was a disconcerting wing vibration in flight. Therefore, the second Fokker triplane, the V.4, was given thin wooden interplane struts to eliminate the vibration. The cabane struts were steel-tube inverted vees. The V.4 flew first on 14 July 1917 and became the prototype Fokker DR.I. On 14 July 1917, Idflieg (Inspektion der Fliegertruppen), the bureau of the German Empire that oversaw German military aviation prior to and during World War I, issued an order for 20 pre-production aircraft. The first DR-1's began to reach fighter squadrons during August 1917 but were suspended from operations from October till December to rectify a fault in the wing construction. The Fokker DR.I became renowned as the aircraft in which Manfred von Richthofen gained his last 19 victories, and in which he was killed on 21 April 1918. About 320 airframes of the Fokker DR.I Dreidecker were built by Fokker-Flugzeugwerke m.b.H., Schwerin, Mecklenburg.

Fokker DR.I replica s/n 20002643 is registered D-EWWI in Germany. The red colors of this Fokker DR.I replica are based on the colors of the Fokker DR.1 used by the Luftstreitkrafte and well known to Manfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richthofen, during WWI known as the Red Baron. The aircraft is coded 415/17.
On 9 June 2024, Fokker DR.I replica D-EWWI in the WWI Luftstreitkrafte 415/17 colors was seen at Verkehrslandeplatz Ballenstedt-Harz (EDCB).

page last updated: 03-07-2024
Copyright © Jack Wolbrink, Emmen, the Netherlands
 

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