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Albatros BII

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Be glad that the oldest Albatros in OFF is the D II. This is from further back the B II

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:salute: I wonder if there was an Albatros A-2 ?

 

Older than that, and you'd have a Wright Flyer!:rofl:

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Well for one thing it's a 2 seater or it's unarmed in a Shooting War, because it was obviously prior to the interrupter gear

 

The Pilot appears to have severely limited forward vision, it's all engine. It looks so restricted he'd need to look out the side into the wind all the time

 

What appears to be RADIATORS on the side of the fusilage, look solid which would make then expansion tanks, so there's no water pump. It would move it's coolent by convection.

 

With that type of cooling, your flights couldn't be to long, or the pilot gets cooked

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I heard an interesting story on another forum which makes sense

 

After the Germans captured Roland Garos's aircraft before he could burn it. They tried the Steel Wedge idea on their own with an EIII, which resulted in one shot off propellor. There was another part of the equation they didn't have.

 

Unknown to them, Roland Garos used reduced velocity ammo with non-jacketed bullets.....They only needed to be deadly for 100yards . . after that who cared

 

When the German Generals were all gathered for the Demonstration, and they shot full jacketed, high velocity ammo they shot off their propellor

 

The High Command then gave Anthony Fokker two weeks to build a working system, there was no Russian Front THEN, But Firing Squads were rather popular

The rest is HISTORY

 

That's why the interrupter gear was used on a wing warper

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Be glad that the oldest Albatros in OFF is the D II. This is from further back the B II

 

MMMMMMMMMMMMM SE 5 and Sopwith Food. What I like about the B II it doesn't turn too tight

What I like about the B II it burns so bright

:laugh::declare::yes::dance2: That is what I like :idhitit:

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They're all Albatros, one's a B1, the others are before that, how far before ? . . . . Got me

post-73193-0-85050400-1323822530.jpg

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post-73193-0-83686500-1323822610.jpg

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Well for one thing it's a 2 seater or it's unarmed in a Shooting War, because it was obviously prior to the interrupter gear

 

The Pilot appears to have severely limited forward vision, it's all engine. It looks so restricted he'd need to look out the side into the wind all the time

 

What appears to be RADIATORS on the side of the fusilage, look solid which would make then expansion tanks, so there's no water pump. It would move it's coolent by convection.

 

With that type of cooling, your flights couldn't be to long, or the pilot gets cooked

 

The B.II was a very well designed and liked plane for it's purpose and time-frame. In that early era, pilots did not fly for combat, they flew for information. It was not until Garros attached the rife that it became for combat. Before then, the observer carried a rife, and tried to shoot at other observation planes with little success. There were no aerial combat tactics, no MG's mounted, no sense of fear other than the plane falling apart.

 

The side grates are radiators as you have pointed out. Again, no need to worry as no one was shooting at them... until the interrupter gear and Lewis gun game into play for the Entente... but by then the Huns were flying the C.III, Aviatiks, Rumplers, DFW's and other better machines than this one.

 

I wish we could have the Alb B.I and B.II, even though it did not last long, it would be a lot of fun to just do observation flights with no combat to worry about. Just flying.

 

Knock the B.II, but I'd take it any day over that death trap Cauldron G.III/G.IV any day of the week. ;)

 

All the best,

 

OvS

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Garros' steel wedges were in fact backups for the interrupter gear that Morane-Saulnier had developed. Gunnery tests had revealed hang fires and an irregular firing rate of the open-bolt machine guns they used caused bullets to strike the prop, hence the backup wedges. The gear was still on the plane when it went down. That Fokker designed syncro gear in two weeks is a myth propagated by Fokker himself, via his autobiography. He was given contract to come up with syncro gear but he had already been working on it for months, believed based on a 1913 patent held by Franz Schneider, a Swiss with Luftverkehrsgesellschaft (LVG).

 

To back up what OVS said, the Albatros B.II was one of the war's great planes. The pilot sat in the rear cockpit.

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