Early in the war, pilots and observers went up armed with rifles and gernades. Later each fighter plane was armed with 1 or 2 machine guns.
Depending on which country and which airplane they could have:
Hotchkiss Gun (France), LewisMod.15 and Lewis Aerial (Allies), Vickers-Maxim Mk.I (Br Empire, US), Colt-Browning Mod.1895/1914 (US), Parabellum Mod.1921 (Germany), Schwarzlose 7/12 (Austria) and LMG 08/15 Spandau (Germany)
Until Fokker Aircraft designer Antony Fokker designed an interrupter gear, machine guns had to be mounted on an upper wing strut, above the propeller.
The Zero was a type of Japanese fighter plane, the Mitsubishi A6-M. It was fast and nimble, and heavily armed. At the start of the war it was better than the fighter planes the Allies had. But, it lacked any armor for the pilot or self-sealing fuel tanks, which made it vulnerable. By the end of the war the newer Allied fighter planes were better than the Zero.
Japanese records were destroyed during WWII. However, it's estimated that Mitsubishi built nearly 12,000 A6M Zero fighters; Kawasaki built nearly 4,000 Type 61 and Type 100's (Tony and Hien fighters).
The two major British fighter planes were the Hurricane and the Spitfire. The primary type was fighter. Some aircraft were used for rescue of downed airmen at sea and for coastal patrols. These varied from seaplanes to two-engine bombers.
The length of time to assemble a fighter plane depended on the type of plane, the manufacturing plant and which nation was doing the building. At the beginning of the war, the Brits were turning out 400 fighter planes a month. The US could produce more than that a month but we had more types of fighters and companies. I have included a production graph for you on the web site below. This chart does include all types of planes though. Follow the links and references and you may find fighter plane production figures.
There were many different types of machinery and weapons used during the war. Rifles, torpedo's, gas and machine guns were all weapons of choice. Tanks, Zeppelins and planes were all used as well.
EuroFighter Typhoon
Aluminium for passenger planes and titanium for fighter planes
The Zero was a type of Japanese fighter plane, the Mitsubishi A6-M. It was fast and nimble, and heavily armed. At the start of the war it was better than the fighter planes the Allies had. But, it lacked any armor for the pilot or self-sealing fuel tanks, which made it vulnerable. By the end of the war the newer Allied fighter planes were better than the Zero.
Japanese records were destroyed during WWII. However, it's estimated that Mitsubishi built nearly 12,000 A6M Zero fighters; Kawasaki built nearly 4,000 Type 61 and Type 100's (Tony and Hien fighters).
they did : women's auxilliary services women's land army women's volutary services and did house jobs and help with the planes and weapons.
The two major British fighter planes were the Hurricane and the Spitfire. The primary type was fighter. Some aircraft were used for rescue of downed airmen at sea and for coastal patrols. These varied from seaplanes to two-engine bombers.
What wartime technological developments contributed to the fighter as a military type of airplane in world war I
The length of time to assemble a fighter plane depended on the type of plane, the manufacturing plant and which nation was doing the building. At the beginning of the war, the Brits were turning out 400 fighter planes a month. The US could produce more than that a month but we had more types of fighters and companies. I have included a production graph for you on the web site below. This chart does include all types of planes though. Follow the links and references and you may find fighter plane production figures.
There were certainly scout planes, and later in the war, fighters and bombers. Some of the fighter type were Spads, Nieuports, Faeries, Fokkers, among others.
There were many different types of machinery and weapons used during the war. Rifles, torpedo's, gas and machine guns were all weapons of choice. Tanks, Zeppelins and planes were all used as well.
Germany's Red Baron flew a peculiar type of fighter plane in World War One. It had three wings and was called the Fokker DR1 triplane.
Mitsubishi A6M Zero