- a
triplane.
During World War I, some
aircraft manufacturers turned to the
triplane configuration for
fighter aircraft. In
practice these triplanes generally...
-
Clayton &
Shuttleworth for 106
Triplanes.
Quantity production of the type
commenced in late 1916. The
first Sopwith-built
Triplanes were
delivered to Clayton...
- The
first two pre-production
triplanes were
designated F.I, in
accord with Idflieg's
early class prefix for
triplanes.
These aircraft,
serials 102/17...
- This is a list of
aircraft types having triplane wings.
Citations Davilla 1997, p. 46. "Besson canard". www.aviafrance.com.
Retrieved 2011-01-27. "Besson...
- Bowers,
Peter M.; McDowall,
Ernest R. (1993).
Triplanes: A
Pictorial History of the World's
Triplanes and Multiplanes. St. Paul, MN:
Motorbooks International...
- The
Nieuport Triplanes were a
series of
experimental stagger-wing
triplanes modified from
Nieuport 10, 17 and 17bis
biplanes during World War I that were...
- [citation needed] A
triplane fracture of the
ankle as seen on
plain X-ray A
triplane fracture of the
ankle as seen on CT A
triplane fracture of the ankle...
- are used as
standing rigging to keep a mast vertical. On
biplanes and
triplanes,
shrouds are used as the thin wire
bracing between the wings. "How to...
-
after the
First World War,
possibly in the mid-1920s,
given the fact that
triplanes still have nose-mounted
machine guns
using interrupter gear, and appear...
- pusher. The
British Royal Naval Air
Service (RNAS)
placed an
order for 20
Triplanes. The
first one was
completed at the
Curtiss factory, Buffalo, New York...