From the USAF National Museum Website
Sopwith Camel F-1
The British
Sopwith Camel F-1 shot down more enemy aircraft than any other World War I
fighter. It was highly maneuverable and very difficult to defeat in a dogfight.
Because of its tricky handling characteristics, however, more men lost their
lives while learning to fly it than died while using it in combat.
The Camel
first went into action in June 1917 with 70 Squadron, Royal Flying Corps, and 4
Squadron, Royal Naval Air Service. Two U.S. Army Air Service squadrons, the 17th
and the 148th, flew the Camel in combat while assigned to British
forces during the summer and fall of 1918. Such famous U.S. pilots as George
Vaughn (America’s second-ranking Air Service ace to survive the war), Eliot
White Springs, Errol Zistel, and Larry Callahan were members of the 17th
and 148th. A third U.S. unit, the 185th Aero Squadron,
used the Camel as a night fighter on the American Front during the last month
of the war.
Although 5,490
Camels were produced, very few remain in existence today. USAF personnel built
the Camel on display from the original WWI factory drawings, completing it in
1974. The aircraft is painted and marked as the Camel flown by Lt. George A
Vaughn, Jr, 17th Aero Squadron.
Technical
Notes:
Armament: two
Vickers .303-cal. machine guns
Engine: Clerget
rotary of 130 hp
Maximum
speed: 112 mph
Range: 300 miles
Ceiling: 19,000 feet
Span: 28 feet
Length: 18 feet 9
inches
Height: 8 feet 6
inches
Weight: 1,482 lbs.
maximum
There is a flying Camel at Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome in Red Hook, NY. Love that rotary engine.
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