DFW R.I

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The DFW R.I (company designation T26) was a heavy bomber (Script error: No such module "Lang".) aircraft designed by the Script error: No such module "Lang". (DFW) during the First World War for the Imperial German Army's (Script error: No such module "Lang".) Imperial German Air Service (Script error: No such module "Lang".). One bomber was built and it only flew two combat missions as it was destroyed after making an emergency landing in 1917.

Development

Designed by Hermann Dorner, chief engineer of DFW, it was a large biplane of conventional configuration with four Script error: No such module "convert". water-cooled Mercedes D.IV straight-eight piston engines mounted inside the fuselage. Each engine was provided with a gearbox and clutch, that drove the two-bladed wooden propellers on the wings via driveshafts; two of these were mounted tractor-fashion on the leading edge of the upper wing, and two mounted pusher-fashion on the trailing edge of the lower wing. The DFW heavy bombers were unique among the Script error: No such module "Lang"., in that each engine drove a separate propeller and was not connected to the other engines or propellers.[1]

After factory tests proved promising, military acceptance trials commenced on 19 October 1916. Soon thereafter trouble set in, with the long crankshafts of the D.IV engines repeatedly failing. The cause was determined to be excessive vibrations from the lightly built engine mounts, but new engine mountings were installed and universal joints for the drive shafts were fitted to mitigate the problem, along with extended wings and other improvements.[1]

Operational history

Following these modifications, R.I (R 11/15) was deployed on the Eastern front with Rfa 500 at Alt-Auz, April to September 1917, from whence it bombed Schlok (now Sloka, Latvia), on 13 June. On its second combat mission in September, the R.I was forced to turn back before delivering its bombs due to the failure of two engines; after making a successful emergency landing it was destroyed when it ran into a trench and caught fire, killing one crewman.[2][3]

Specifications (DFW R.I (second version))

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See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

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  1. a b Haddow & Grosz, pp. 88–89
  2. Haddow & Grosz, pp. 90, 92
  3. Herris, pp. 218–219

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Bibliography

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External links

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