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Rumpler Taube

































Rumpler Taube

Description
RoleFighter, Bomber, Surveillance, and Training
Crew2
Dimensions
Length33.5 ft9.9 m
Wingspan45.83 ft14.3 m
Height10.5 ft3.2 m
Wing area280 ft&232.5 m&2
Weights
Empty950 lb650 kg
Maximum take-off1200 lb850 kg
Powerplant
Engines4-Cylinder Argus
or 6-Cylinder Mercedes Typ E4F
Power74 kW
Performance
Maximum speed60 mph100 km/h
Range 140 km
Service ceiling10,000 ft2000 m
Armament
GunsRifles and pistols
BombsHand dropped bombs


The Rumpler Taube is a pre- World War I Monoplane aircraft, and the first mass produced military plane in Germany . Being the Germans' first practical military plane, it was used for all common military aircraft applications, including as a Fighter , Bomber , Surveillance Plane and Trainer from its first flight in 1910 until the beginning of World War I. Due to the rapid advancement of Aviation during the war, the design was obsolete by 1914 .

The plane was developed by Igo Etrich from Austria in 1909 , with the first flight in 1910 , and was called the ''Etrich Taube''. The design was licensed for serial production by Lohner in Austria and Rumpler in Germany, and called the ''Etrich-Rumpler-Taube''. However, Rumpler soon changed the name to ''Rumpler-Taube'', and stopped paying royalties to Etrich. Etrich subsequently abandoned his patent. Due to the lack of license fees, a total of no less than 14 companies built a large number of variations of the initial design, making it difficult for historians to determine the exact manufacturer based on historic photographs. An incomplete list is shown below. The most common version was the ''Rumpler Taube'' with 2 seats. The plane was very popular, and used by the air forces of Italy , Germany and Austria-Hungary .



Despite its name, the ''Taube'' (German: dove) was not modeled after a bird, but after the Zanonia Macrocarpa seeds, which glide to the ground in a slow spin induced by a single wing. Similar wing shapes have also been used by Karl Jatho . While Etrich had tried to build a flying wing aircraft based on the Zanonia wing shape, the conventional ''Taube'' was much more successful.

Most notably, the plane did not have Aileron s in the wings. Instead, the pilot turned the plane by Warping The Wings (effectively providing the same functionality as ailerons) and using the Elevator s at the rear of the tail.

The design provided for very stable flight, suitable for observation. In addition, the translucent wings made it very difficult for ground based observers to detect a ''Taube'' at an altitude above 400m. The French called this plane also "the Invisible Aircraft", and it is sometimes also referred to as the "world's very first stealth plane". The first hostile engagement was an Italian ''Taube'' in 1911 in Libya , using pistols and 2 kg bombs. ''Taube'' airplanes were able to detect the advancing Russian army during the Battle Of Tannenberg ( 1914 ). The plane was also used for bombing, when the pilot dropped small bombs in the Balkans in 1911 and 3 kg bomblets and Propaganda leaflets over Paris in 1914 .

However, the lack of a rudder and the wing warping design made this plane difficult and slow to turn. Subsequently the plane was a very easy target for the faster and more mobile enemy planes at the beginning of World War I. Therefore, 6 months into the war, the ''Taube'' was removed from the front lines and instead used to train new pilots. Consequently many famous pilots learned how to fly using a ''Taube''.


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