AN ILLUSTRATED ACCOUNT OF THE DH 2, THE MOST SUCCESSFUL 'PUSHER'
FIGHTER OF WORLD WAR I, AGAINST THE ALBATROS D II, PART OF A LONG
FAMILY OF FIGHTERS THAT IN MANY WAYS SYMBOLIZED GERMAN AERIAL MIGHT IN
THE CONFLICT.
Flown by Victoria Cross recipient Lanoe Hawker and the members of No
24 Sqn, the ungainly yet nimble DH 2 helped the Allies attain air
superiority over the Somme in early 1916 and hold it through the
summer. With its rotary engine 'pusher' configuration affording
excellent visibility and eliminating the need for a synchronized
machine gun, the DH 2 was more than a match for anything the Germans
could put in the air. That is, until the arrival of the Albatros D II,
a sleek inline-engined machine built for speed and with twin-gun
firepower.
This book dissects the epic struggle in the skies above the Somme in
1916, pitting the manoeuvrable yet under-gunned DH 2s against the less
nimble yet better armed and faster Albatros D IIs. In the end the
Germans would regain air superiority, three squadron commanders –
two of whom were considered pinnacles of their respective air forces
– would lose their lives, and an up-and-coming pilot (Manfred von
Richthofen) would triumph in a legendary dogfight and attain
unimagined heights fighting with tactics learned from a fallen mentor.
Les mer
Western Front 1916
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781780964201
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter