Description

An illustrated history of how the British fighter developed, both single- and two-seaters.

At the outset of World War I the British had some 110 assorted aircraft, used mostly for the visual reconnaissance role. With the advent of faster and more agile single-seaters, the Allies and their adversaries raced to outdo each other in the creation of genuinely effective fighters with fixed forward-firing machine gun armament. It was not until 1917 that the British developed a truly effective interrupter gear, which paved the way for excellent single seaters such as the Sopwith Triplane Camel and the RAF S.E.5., later joined by the Bristol F.2B - the war's best two-seat fighter.

This volume traces the rapid development of the fighter in World War I and the amazing exploits of the British and Empire aces who flew them.

Table of Contents

Early days and the RFC
The Squadrons and their markings
The Royal Naval Air Service
The birth of the RAF

Product details

Published Nov 20 2012
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 96
ISBN 9781782006770
Imprint Osprey Publishing
Illustrations 101 b/w; 37 col
Series Aircraft of the Aces
Short code ACE 45
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Christopher Shores

Christopher Shores is a well known author of autho…

Illustrator

Mark Rolfe

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