Subject
: Library of America queries (fwd)
Date
Body
From: jake pultorak <jake_pultorak@bge.com>
The Caudron biplane reference is simply that: a reference to
biplanes made by the French airplane manufacturer Caudron, circa
WWI. Confirmation of this reference yielded a curious item.
Identified as a frail, two-seat "sesquiplane", the Caudron G.III
served a brief career on the front, since it was slow and lacked
defenses. But it was widely used as a trainer, and "some
reconnaissance G.IIa2s continued to be used in less strenuous
areas, such as the Balkans, Mesopotamia, and Russia." (*Aircraft
of World War I*, Munson, p.43)
Perhaps it was used to train a certain Balkan King...
The Caudron biplane reference is simply that: a reference to
biplanes made by the French airplane manufacturer Caudron, circa
WWI. Confirmation of this reference yielded a curious item.
Identified as a frail, two-seat "sesquiplane", the Caudron G.III
served a brief career on the front, since it was slow and lacked
defenses. But it was widely used as a trainer, and "some
reconnaissance G.IIa2s continued to be used in less strenuous
areas, such as the Balkans, Mesopotamia, and Russia." (*Aircraft
of World War I*, Munson, p.43)
Perhaps it was used to train a certain Balkan King...