Wow, starts to give you the feel of what it must be like to fly one of these birds. You can see the canvas and the various bits and pieces all vibrate and move with the buffeting and vibration of the engine and wind and etc. What an amazingly visceral experience it must be to fly such a thing.
It really isn't a big deal. First, you are wearing a harness that keeps you firmly in place. In addition going inverted doesn't immediately result in gravity pulling you downward. If the aircraft is pitching nose up, in this case toward the ground, you will feel weightless, and if you are pulling any Gs then you will feel a centrifugal force "G-Force" holding you in the seat. The pilot would have to push forward on the stick to feel negative "G-force" and actually feel like they are being pulled out of the seat. When you loop or roll in a roller coaster you usually feel like you are being pressed into your seat rather than pulled out. On the other hand, when you ride over the top of a crest and start descending, that's when you usually feel like you are rising up out of the seat, and you are still sitting upright!
@@nakajima4058 both are great pilots but take into account that most of Hartmanns kills were fighting less trained pilots and less good aircraft. The soviets also used mass attack doctrines making their planes bunched together in mass numbers. Ww1 was much more graceful and evenly matched.
@@eli4984 yep, in WW1 if you wanted to be a pilot first you'd have to be from a well-established family, in WW2 anyone who could fly on a basic level could be a pilot
Back in my day, we didn't have no fancy slip indicator gauge! My day being, of course, a flight simulator... You couldn't have picked a better paint scheme. Love everything about this. This would be a dream come true.
@@knightsofthesky that's priceless! Mind you, I just learned the Le Rhone-powered Siemens-Shuckert D.IV flying here in New Zealand has brakes. Blew my mind!
In the 90's I went up as a passenger in a replica of the Red Baron. I had balls of steelback then even being a woman! Flew out of P'tree-DeKalb airport in Atlanta. That was before I became an av-geek.
Anthony Fokker (the designer of this plane) was a genius. He designed a system that prevented the machine gun to shoot in a position where it may hit the propeller. Basically it only shot when the propeller is horizontal. Because the propeller moves so fast it had no impact on the rate of fire.
Spectacular!! How loud is it with helmet and ear plugs? Does the noise start to get to you or is it ok? What about wind blast? Is it uncomfortable? Thanks for posting this amazing perspective!
I haven't pushed it beyond 1300 rpm...I hit 1300 rpm right about 100-102 mph. The plane would definitely go faster with a little more pitch on it. If I pushed the throttle all the way up...I'd probably hit 1350-1400. I have no idea what that would do to the motor, if anything at all. I can't afford to test it though.
@@knightsofthesky Awesome Vid Dude!! I want to know how u came to fly that DR1! .. As a teenager I was familiar with the the Rhinebeck Aerodrone where many WW1planes were restored and flown🍷🍷😎
@@pagodadr facebook.com/KOTSWWI/posts/177976873560419?__tn__=K-R That link should take you to a write up I did about my first flight :) Rhinebeck has a wonderful set of airplanes! A must visit for any aviation enthusiast!
It has throttle that covers a range of 30-100% thrust. To get below 30%, it uses a "blip switch" to cut the ignition. The airflow keeps the propeller turning in the air except at the slowest speeds, like right right before touching down on landing.
@Chill31000 I heard of pilots during the first world war losing power and forced down. Of course alot of pilots had minimal training but wonder why? Thanks for your answer it gives me insight.
@Vaughan power battle damage will force you down of course. Their ignition systems were relatfragile in those days too, using paper insulation for capacitors and coils in the magnetos, and copper fuel lines.
Forgot to ask: I've never heard a LeRhone or Gnome rotary in person. Games and videos usually make them sound like lawn mowers, but they had BIG JUGS. Do they have the throaty growl that I imagine them to?
something looks strange to me. Where the struts attach to the fuselage? They seem to be outside the actual fuselage. What am I looking at? I can't find a pic of a DRI with that strut setup.
The struts that hold the top wing onto the plane? They are bolted to sockets welded to the fuselage. The original was done the same way. In the video, you can't see it due to the fuselage fairings covering it up.
Aww... oil on the beautiful paint job... the downfall of an engine with no oil recovery. How are you feeling after breathing caster oil? Are the stories true?
thank you for not putting stupid music over the orginal sound 👍👍😁
One of the best videos I know so far showing the look, feel and sound of flying such a plane!
There's something touching about seeing it fly side-by-side with the British plane.
Which they did back in the day when they ran out of ammunition...
Wow, starts to give you the feel of what it must be like to fly one of these birds. You can see the canvas and the various bits and pieces all vibrate and move with the buffeting and vibration of the engine and wind and etc. What an amazingly visceral experience it must be to fly such a thing.
Amazing!
So great to see a real pilot's eye view.
Watching this, I'm starting to realize how horrifying going inverted in an open cockpit plane must be, especially a small one like this.
It really isn't a big deal. First, you are wearing a harness that keeps you firmly in place. In addition going inverted doesn't immediately result in gravity pulling you downward. If the aircraft is pitching nose up, in this case toward the ground, you will feel weightless, and if you are pulling any Gs then you will feel a centrifugal force "G-Force" holding you in the seat. The pilot would have to push forward on the stick to feel negative "G-force" and actually feel like they are being pulled out of the seat.
When you loop or roll in a roller coaster you usually feel like you are being pressed into your seat rather than pulled out. On the other hand, when you ride over the top of a crest and start descending, that's when you usually feel like you are rising up out of the seat, and you are still sitting upright!
@@oracle427 I know that, but it's still terrifying
It's great fun!
@@ViktorVonfuling lol than imagine getting shot at while doing these stunts to stay alive.
Perfect! Natural sounds too!
Actual sounds, not natural. There is nothing natural about any of these sounds. Lol.
The Red Baron was one hell of a good pilot. If only he had survived the war he would have been decorated as one of the best veterans of the era.
The Red Baron - 80 kills in ww1
Erich Hartmann - 352 kills in ww2
@@nakajima4058 Did I say he was the best? No.
@@nakajima4058 Richthofen and Hartmann flew on very different machines in very different times. No comparison to be made here...
@@nakajima4058 both are great pilots but take into account that most of Hartmanns kills were fighting less trained pilots and less good aircraft. The soviets also used mass attack doctrines making their planes bunched together in mass numbers. Ww1 was much more graceful and evenly matched.
@@eli4984 yep, in WW1 if you wanted to be a pilot first you'd have to be from a well-established family, in WW2 anyone who could fly on a basic level could be a pilot
Coolest video I’ve seen on TH-cam in quite some time!! Amazing 🤩
Amazing! I came here through your forum posts on IL2 Sturmovik about all things Fokker Dr.1
I love your plane!
The real rotary Gnome engine on a DR1 nice flight..🤠🏴🇺🇸👍
Absolutely lovely... what a plane... thank you for sharing
Back in my day, we didn't have no fancy slip indicator gauge!
My day being, of course, a flight simulator...
You couldn't have picked a better paint scheme. Love everything about this. This would be a dream come true.
I was so amazed and confused at the idea of a rotary-powered Dr.I having brakes!! 😂 She’s a beauty, thank you for sharing so many videos.
Haha, it doesnt really have brakes. Just making a joke to my armstrong starter. He laughed, so it must have been funny
@@knightsofthesky that's priceless! Mind you, I just learned the Le Rhone-powered Siemens-Shuckert D.IV flying here in New Zealand has brakes. Blew my mind!
Great video . Nice to see this perspective . Thanks for posting . Great the plane has a rotary .
In the 90's I went up as a passenger in a replica of the Red Baron. I had balls of steelback then even being a woman! Flew out of P'tree-DeKalb airport in Atlanta. That was before I became an av-geek.
Wow amazing I would love see one in the air one of these days
Gotta love the climb rate on the Dr.1
3:56 this is one of the best shots ever filmed in an airplane.
Love the Sopwith Camel too.
Best video ever about a dogfight scenario in WWI, and with such untouched sound
Brilliant. Puts a smile on my face every time 👍
True stick and rudder flying.
That is one tight airfield!
Absolutely beautiful the Triplane is my favorite airplane!
takes serious courage to go up in one of these old machines!
This is one of your best vids bro
Very brave actually. Well done sir
Just watched this. That was Awesome!!
Fantastic. I felt it was me in the seat.
Makes you realis how accurate some of the video games actually are.
Maybe it was drowned out by the wind noise, but I couldn't hear you saying "Takka-takka-takka-takka!" when you had the cross-hairs on the Camel...
Question: How did Germans managed to time the gun fire speed perfectly, so the bullets won't demage the propeler?
Anthony Fokker (the designer of this plane) was a genius. He designed a system that prevented the machine gun to shoot in a position where it may hit the propeller. Basically it only shot when the propeller is horizontal. Because the propeller moves so fast it had no impact on the rate of fire.
He was Dutch
Wow. Great video
Amazing video! love it!
Let's have a minute of silence for all (dead) pilots who have flown this plane during the ww1...
only 1
awesome man
We get to meet the Fokker! 😊
Did not have to worry about instruments sticking with all that vibration lol
I love this
Great video.. Probably down a quarter or so of oil though.
Spectacular!! How loud is it with helmet and ear plugs? Does the noise start to get to you or is it ok? What about wind blast? Is it uncomfortable? Thanks for posting this amazing perspective!
Nice video👍
So cool
wow ty kool video lucky your flying one :)
So working Spandau guns? 😊
The Fokkerstick without throttle controll?
Great!
Fucking awesome become the machine!
Any engine instruments?
Do these weapons fire? do you leave them armed, or does any law forbid it?
These are only replica guns. I have plans to make them into gas firing guns though! No bullets involved but it would simulate the sound
Back then this was seen as alien technology
Wow
Brakes? ;-)
What engine is in this plane..
Chill, what’s your max rpm with that 92 pitch prop? I know you don’t want to over speed it at 1300
I haven't pushed it beyond 1300 rpm...I hit 1300 rpm right about 100-102 mph. The plane would definitely go faster with a little more pitch on it. If I pushed the throttle all the way up...I'd probably hit 1350-1400. I have no idea what that would do to the motor, if anything at all. I can't afford to test it though.
Chill31000 ya no kidding! Thanks for the reply.
That's def not Rhinebeck, where is this? Great Vid!!
Georgia!
@@knightsofthesky Awesome Vid Dude!! I want to know how u came to fly that DR1! .. As a teenager I was familiar with the the Rhinebeck Aerodrone where many WW1planes were restored and flown🍷🍷😎
@@pagodadr facebook.com/KOTSWWI/posts/177976873560419?__tn__=K-R
That link should take you to a write up I did about my first flight :) Rhinebeck has a wonderful set of airplanes! A must visit for any aviation enthusiast!
@@knightsofthesky outstanding writeup!
Does this DR1 have a Blip switch like the original, or do you not need it? The engine cutting in an out on landing sounded exactly like it.
Yes sir! It does have one. The engine setup is as it was originally.
What plane were used for this, ron sands?
Was this built using Ron Sands or redfern plans?
The plant kind of sounds like the TARDIS
The red baron flew one of these didnt he?
He did. This is the same plane in which he made his last 20 victories as well as the same plane in which he was shot down and killed.
What is up with that oil on the left wing? Awesome vid.
Haha it's a rotary. All the oil that goes in...goes out
@@knightsofthesky gotta love total loss!
Now thats flying, ya don't need ya a*s* on fire to do that.!
The motor is either on or off right. So is it possible that you turn it off to lose speed and the motor stops altogether from llack of revs.
It has throttle that covers a range of 30-100% thrust. To get below 30%, it uses a "blip switch" to cut the ignition. The airflow keeps the propeller turning in the air except at the slowest speeds, like right right before touching down on landing.
@Chill31000 I heard of pilots during the first world war losing power and forced down. Of course alot of pilots had minimal training but wonder why? Thanks for your answer it gives me insight.
@Vaughan power battle damage will force you down of course. Their ignition systems were relatfragile in those days too, using paper insulation for capacitors and coils in the magnetos, and copper fuel lines.
@@knightsofthesky Excellent thanks.
Forgot to ask: I've never heard a LeRhone or Gnome rotary in person. Games and videos usually make them sound like lawn mowers, but they had BIG JUGS. Do they have the throaty growl that I imagine them to?
They can growl at low revs, but at high power, they sound sort of lawn mowerish
How they used the gun machines wo breaking the helix?
The machine guns were synchronized to fire each time a propeller blade pass the gun barrel as long as the gun had time to recock itself.
Is this an aerodrome airplanes replica kit? Or is it built from plans?
It is based on Ron Sands plans
something looks strange to me. Where the struts attach to the fuselage? They seem to be outside the actual fuselage. What am I looking at? I can't find a pic of a DRI with that strut setup.
The struts that hold the top wing onto the plane? They are bolted to sockets welded to the fuselage. The original was done the same way. In the video, you can't see it due to the fuselage fairings covering it up.
@@knightsofthesky OK thanks. I hadn't seen those fuselage fairings before.
Gotta be in FL, but I wont reveal! loL🍷🍷😎 Happy New Year! back in the 20'S
Awesome!
Dig!
Aww... oil on the beautiful paint job... the downfall of an engine with no oil recovery. How are you feeling after breathing caster oil? Are the stories true?
So far, no negative effects! 😁 my longest flight so far is 35 minutes
Could you be more thirsty?
nice Spandau, real or repro?
Repro. I can only dream of actual Spandau. $$$
cool as hell... visability is not so great in that plane
Is the guns work?
Oil leak 😦
Oh yeah, major leak!
HIGHER!!!
Who flew the Dr-1 with that Distinctive Design in World war 1 . Was it Wolff or Voss ?
Can you put the Top Gun theme over this please.