Friedrichshafen FF.43
The Friedrichshafen FF.43 was a German protoype single-seat floatplane fighter developed during World War I by the Friedrichshafen Aircraft Company (Script error: No such module "Lang".) for the Imperial German Navy's (Script error: No such module "Lang".) Naval Air Service (Script error: No such module "Lang".). Only one aircraft in 1916 was ordered; it shot down one British seaplane during operational trials later that year. It was destroyed in January 1917.
Development and description
Designed for defence of the naval air stations,[1] the Naval Air Service ordered a single FF.43 floatplane single-seat fighter from Friedrichshafen in January 1916.[2] Unlike most aircraft designed by the company, the aircraft was of mixed wood and metal construction that was covered in doped fabric. A single-bay biplane, the upper wing was positioned close to the fuselage to improve the pilot's view above him. Its pair of floats were connected to the fuselage with a total of six struts. The FF.43 was powered by a Script error: No such module "convert". Mercedes D.III straight-six piston engine driving a two-bladed propeller with a spinner. The radiator was mounted on the surface of the upper wing and the engine's exhaust pipe extended upwards past the upper wing. The aircraft was armed with a pair of 7.92 mm (0.312 in) LMG 08/15 forward-firing machine guns, one gun mounted on each side of the engine.[3][4]
The FF.43 made its first flight on 8 September and it was turned over to the Navy's Seaplane Experimental Command (Script error: No such module "Lang".) about 30 September. Although it was slightly faster and more heavily armed than the competing Albatros W.4, it was not selected for production, possibly because its rate of climb was inferior to its competitor.[5] The prototype was transferred to Naval Air Station Flanders I (Script error: No such module "Lang".) at Zeebrugge in Occupied Belgium on 4 October.[6] On 10 November, its pilot forced one of a pair of Short 184 floatplanes on a patrol between Zeebrugge and Dunkirk, France, to make an emergency landing. The German pilots notified the port master in Ostende, but ships sent to locate the disabled aircraft found nothing.[7][Note 1] The FF.43 was destroyed in a landing accident on 23 January 1917.[8]
Specifications
See also
Related lists
Notes
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- ↑ Schmeelke says that no losses by the Royal Navy Air Service are known for that date, speculating that the aircraft was recovered by the Royal Navy, although Herris gives names. Herris, pp. 176, 178; Schmeelke, pp. 109–110.
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References
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Bibliography
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