Looks really nice! Think about this one myself!!!! Need to stop drinking coffee or eating and save some money!
Thanks for posting the photos! Now I gotta decide what to work on next while waiting for the SPAD 13 camo scheme magazines to arrive...
If the request door is open, I would love some Jasta 5 Albatros D.Va. There are a lot of cool Albatros Schemes out there!!! Siemens-Schuckerts would be great as well since they are hard to find.
Right now anything the size of a two-seater is too expensive (even more so a big flying boat). I did a full color R.A.F. F.E.2b and it came out around $100 -- I didn't even make that available on Etsy at that price. I had a talk with a Shapeways representative about it though, and he's looking to see if there is any way to make it work. Lessons learned though... for now I'll focus on one-seat fighters with "difficult" paint jobs.
Daryl simultaneously crushing our dreams and making them come true.
HHmm....You would think. Interesting looking. I may have to do some reading tonight.
Thanks!!!!
Well, Thank goodness for Jagdstaffel 5 Volumes 1 and 2. Great books. Yes, that Rumey flew some pretty darn neat looking planes. I have to say, that striping had to be some serious work!!!!!
Ooolala!
Interesting!
<<B.S.G.>> Gods-dammit!
Want!
I laugh in the face of danger - then I hide until it goes away!
Pete, those are some nice ones! Not sure which ones I want to get next.
I have noticed with my own research that the pilots sometimes went through many many planes. The markings were not the same from plane to plane. So, depending on when the photo was taken sometimes it is difficult to determine what marking scheme was the dominate variant. Lots of contradictions and mistakes in all the books and articles that I have looked through. Which is understandable. We are dealing with black and white photos from over 100 years ago. I am pretty sure that there are very few people who understand how the colors diffused through the light filter of those old glass plate cameras.
I mean look at Nungesser. He has several Nieuport 17 planes that he flew. That, or he like repainting the darn thing a lot.
True enough, but there are "unforced" errors.
Raben's Triplane is one such.
He only ever had one Triplane - 479/17
It never had a red cowling - only white.
All the contemporary planes in Jasta 18 (Pfalz D.IIIa, Albatros D.Va, Fokker D.VII, Hanover CL.II, Airco DH4) ALL had a white "face", with Vermillion Red abaft this (even Raben's Fokker D.VII). All known photographs show this - I can't find a single one showing a non-white "face". Yet, somehow, the mistake was created. A simple careless mistake by an aeroplane enthusiast gets published, and is then propagated all around the world, despite the evidence against it being readily available. Take the Blue/White 'Raben' Triplane, now positively disproved - it NEVER EXISTED, but publications showing the erroneous colour profile continue to circulate...
True enough, many pilots went through multiple aircraft, and/or multiple colour schemes - but Raben didn't.
He had just ONE Triplane, in just ONE colour scheme (the National Crosses on white fields were converted to late-War "bar" crosses at some point in mid/late 1918, though) - and yet we are confronted with multiple erroneous schemes, with no way to correct/eliminate all the incorrect information circulating in the information ether/printed publications.
It's so frustrating.
I laugh in the face of danger - then I hide until it goes away!
Good - that's the most important thing.
I laugh in the face of danger - then I hide until it goes away!
If copyright didn't get in the way, an enterprising person running a WIKI could post the most-current images, paintings, and photos of the known planes. Then there would be a way to correct things as new knowledge comes to light. But alas that's not possible.
As a person who grew up when the publications on WWI aircraft were much more sparse than today, I am glad that we've got a lot more information at our fingertips. (Albeit it's not cheap, or I'd own all the Aeronaut books). When I got started, there was little more than Profile Publication pamphlets, the Harleyford books, Grey & Thetford's book on German aircraft, and similar.
I did correct the Raben 3D print. (Though you can barely see the white nose from this angle.)
Much better!
The experience of putting together my Jasta 2 Research Project led me to list multiple errors from multiple sources, and the work was exhaustive!
Even now, I haven't access to everything, so some of my conclusions may well be wrong.
I laugh in the face of danger - then I hide until it goes away!
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