There is a similar question on here like this. Here is a list of the most common ones.
Bleriot - out-dated by 1915 but still used as a trainer
Farman HF.20 & F.40
Hanroit HD-1 (made in France but exported to Belgium, US Navy)
Salmson Type 2 - bomber used by USA
Breguet Types 4, 5 and 14 - bomber
Voisin - Types 1 to 6 and 8 to 10
Morane-Saulnier -- Several models: L, P N
Nieuport - Models 10, 11, 12, 16, 17 24 and 27
Nieport 28 - different design than the Nieuport 11 & 17 and used by USA.
Packard-Le Pere
SPAD - Societe Pour l'Aviation et ses Derivees - Types A2, VII, XI, XIII
Baseball's Boston Red Sox player Ted Williams flew US Navy fighter planes during the Korean War.
they were many different colours they could be black - night fighter blue - reconnaissance camouflage (dark colours like black, dark green) - no specific role camouflage (lighter colours like sandy yellow and light brown) - desert operations some planes might just be silver (some bombers E.G. B-24 liberator) or dark olive green (bombers like the B-17 flying fortress) and many more colours that i cant remember. try looking at some pictures of ww2 planes mentioned in this answer or any other planes you might want to type in.
See the related link for some great pictures -
The development of radar, the use of aircraft carriers, the use of planes in massive bombardments, culminating with the use of planes to drop the Atomic Bomb.
Nieuport, Sopwith, Fokker, DeHavilland, Bristol, Caproni, Vickers, and SPAD were some of the companies that made WW1 airplanes.
A26 fighter plane made by Douglas Aircraft, Long Beach, California
The Messerschmitt
1. Piston engine fighter planes.
In the 1920's, fighter planes cost about 50,000 per plane to produce. However, some were as expensive as 1.5 million dollars to produce.
"World War II fighter planes were some of the finest fighters ever developed, but are completely obsolete in today's world of Mach 2 jets".
They mostly did a lot of air recon to spot enemy troop movements. There was also some air to air combat. The numbers of how many planes in each arsnal is unclear but what i know is that there were over 130 planes in the British side 85 in its arsenal were combat fighter planes and the rest did either recon or propaganda. :)
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.
Baseball's Boston Red Sox player Ted Williams flew US Navy fighter planes during the Korean War.
Flying World War 1 fighter planes, writing novels ("It was a dark and stormy night..."), eating, stealing Charlie Brown's kite, licking Lucy with his dog lips, etc.
The few remaining airplanes are in museums. Some replicas have been made and they are also in museums or privately owned. They are used in air shows.
No. The US had some fighter biplanes attached to the USS Macon and USS Akron and those planes were called Sparrowhawks.
No. In reallife no one will say this going to be easy to shoot down military fighter aircrafts. Many people know that military planes flying at high speed are really difficult to shoot down. Planes flying at supersonic speed can really dodge from missiles. Most military planes have a lock on radar system that allows them to know that they are being locked on by a missile but some planes are really difficult to detect on radar because of the stealth.