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Hansa-Brandenburg W.16

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W.16
W 16 43640271.jpg
RoleFighter
National originGermany
Manufacturer Hansa-Brandenburg
First flightFebruary 1917
Primary user Imperial German Navy
Number built3

The Hansa-Brandenburg W.16 was a single-seat floatplane fighter designed by the Hansa-Brandenburg Aircraft Company (Hansa Brandenburgische Flugzeugwerke) for the Imperial German Navy's (Kaiserliche Marine) Naval Air Service (Marine-Fliegerabteilung) during World War I. Three prototypes were ordered in 1916, but its performance did not justify a production order.

Contents

Design and development

Intended as a replacement for the KDW floatplane fighter for defense of the Naval Air Service's naval bases, the W.16 shared that aircraft's general single-bay biplane wing configuration. The aircraft was also intended to test the viability of rotary engines for seaplanes and was thus fitted with a air-cooled, 14-cylinder 160- metric-horsepower (118  kW ) Oberursel U.III rotary that drove a two-bladed, fixed-pitch propeller. The W.16 was constructed from fabric-covered wood and its fuselage and floats were skinned with plywood. [1] The KDW's star-shaped interplane struts was replaced with V-shaped struts on each side that connected the upper and lower wings and another strut that ran from the upper longeron of the fuselage to the lower wing replaced the KDW's bracing cables. The armament consisted of a pair of fixed, forward-firing 7.92-millimeter (0.312 in) LMG 08/15 machine guns. [2]

Three prototypes were ordered in November 1916 and the first one was delivered to the Seaplane Experimental Command (Seeflugzeug-Versuchs-Kommando) in February 1917. One prototype was supposedly cancelled in November 1917, but all three are listed in a report on 15 May from Warnemunde. The W.16 was not selected for production because its performance was not an improvement over the KDW and the Naval Air Service was abandoning the short-range defense mission for its fighters. [1] [2] Two aircraft survived the war and were located at Hage when the Allies inspected the German seaplane bases in December 1918. Their ultimate fate is unknown, but they were likely scrapped. [3]

Specifications (W.16)

Data from Hansa-Brandenburg Aircraft of WWI: Volume 2–Biplane Seaplanes [4]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

References

  1. 1 2 Green & Swanborough, p. 85
  2. 1 2 Owers, p. 158
  3. Andersson & Sanger, p. 18
  4. Owers, p. 159

Bibliography

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