Answer
The technology of aircraft design made great changes during WW1. When the war began, many aircraft were designed similar to the Wright Brothers (even though the Wright Bros fought to keep their design a secret by use of patents, the foreign aircraft designers used their designs and improved on them.) Some of the features of the early design included:
A- Elevator controls in front of the wings
B- Pusher engines mounted in rear of the pilot
C- Warped wing flight controls
D- Heavy engines that produced very little horsepower, usually 2 or 4 cycliners
E- Guns were mounted in rear and operated by separate gunner/observer
As the war progressed, aircraft design improved the performance and maneuverabilty of the aircraft. Even though the Rotary Engines became a popular design that produced good thrust-to-weight, it eventually became out-dated. The Rotary Engine would turn with the propellor on a fixed shaft. (A Radial Engine is a fixed engine with its cyclinders mounted around the propellor shaft---it doesn't rotate.) With the improvement of engine technology, the typical engine became the water-cooled, straight-line,multi-cylinder engine. New engines included 12-cylinder engines or V-8 engines that were much lighter and produced more horsepower.
The elevator controls moved to the rear and the engines moved to the front. Eventually the armament was mounted on the fuselage so the pilot would fly the aircraft at his intended target. The common flight controls were hinged control surfaces.
All of these changes became the norm for the post-war aircraft.
Custermen
well, the jet engine was invented by German scientists and put on the first jet aircraft the ME 262 and Britain made the gloster meteor jet fighter so all jet planes today originated from the jets in ww2.
please add to this or correct if needed.
The war demonstrated what the airplane was capable of doing and led to research into bigger and faster aircraft and engines.
Airplanes were excellent for reconnaissance and later bombing and intercepting enemy aircraft.
Hey wat up. Go to google.com, then type in planes in world war two. there u will find ur anser
WWII-Not counting approximately 10,000 airplanes destroyed in US stateside training accidents: US Airplanes lost fighting Germany-USAAF lost 22,948 US Airplanes lost fighting Japan-USAAF lost 4,530 and USN lost 8,592
The war planes that were made during WWII revolutionized warfare completely. Now that there were soldiers in the air with giant bombs, trenches offered no protection. Sure they protected soldiers from stray bullets, but now every second there were planes in the air and the only way you could battle the airplanes was to shoot them down with your own airplanes. So infantry battle strategies were based primarily when your allied planes would come and take out the target.
Airplanes affected American society in many ways. It affected American society because if we didn't have to solely rely on cars or or trains then their would be other ways to travel. Airplanes make it possible to go far distances and travel in other states and regions. Airplanes also affected America for warfare. When America discovered the potential planes could have, they went right to working on their own warplanes.They made it much easier to get to remote places and faster to get across the country.
Planes were airplanes or aircraft. Suicide planes were called "Kamikazes."
The company Diecast Airplane offers a wide variety of airplanes to its consumers. They offer World War I and II planes, helicopters, modern military vehicles, and many others.
Americans drove their airplanes; Britains flew US & British planes; The French surrendered; and Germans and Japanese flew their own planes.
Low and slow...great observation planes.
Being part of England, they flew British planes.
To defeat the Germans and throw grenades from their planes onto citys
The Americans had hundreds of thousands of airplanes in both the Pacific and Europe. See the link below. There is a list of aircraft. Click on the planes and you can see what they looked like. There are museums around the world which have some of the planes from WW2. See if there is one near you.
Gordon Swanborough has written: 'Military transports and training aircraft of the world' -- subject(s): Military Airplanes, Transport planes 'United States military aircraft since 1909' -- subject(s): History, Military Aeronautics, Military Airplanes 'Combat aircraft of the world' -- subject(s): Military Airplanes 'United States military aircraft since 1908' -- subject(s): Military Aeronautics, Military Airplanes 'North American' -- subject(s): North American airplanes (Military aircraft), Rockwell airplanes (Civil aircraft) 'World's airliner registrations' -- subject(s): Airplanes, Registers 'Military aircraft of the world' -- subject(s): Military Airplanes 'British Aircraft at War, 1939-45' 'Civil aircraft of the world' -- subject(s): Private planes, Transport planes
The first airplanes where used as private planes until the military required there services and where used as recon planes during the World Wars.
before WWI, but fighter planes developed in early WWI.
Airplanes were excellent for reconnaissance and later bombing and intercepting enemy aircraft.
The race to build newer more modern air forces (for WWII).