PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Rumpler C.IV
rdfs:comment
  • The Rumpler C.IV was a German single-engine, two-seat reconnaissance biplane. The C.IV was a development of C.III with different tail surfaces and using a Mercedes D.IVa engine in place of C.III's Benz Bz.IV. In addition to the parent company, the aircraft was also built by Pfalz Flugzeugwerke as the Pfalz C.I. Another variant of the basic design was the Rumpler 6B-2 single-seat floatplane fighter, with a 120 kW (160 hp) Mercedes D.III engine, built for the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial Navy).
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
loaded weight main
  • 1530.0
max speed more
  • 30000.0
number of props
  • 1
length alt
  • 27
span main
  • 12.660000
more performance
  • -14400.0
height alt
  • 10
Introduced
  • 1917
primary user
Type
  • Reconnaissance aircraft
type of prop
  • water-cooled in-line
loading main
  • kg/m²
length main
  • 8.410000
power alt
  • 260.0
area main
  • 33.5
power main
  • 194.0
height main
  • 3.250000
span alt
  • 41
Manufacturer
max speed main
  • 171.0
engine (prop)
ceiling main
  • 6,400 m
empty weight main
  • 1080.0
loaded weight alt
  • 3366.0
area alt
  • 361.8
max speed alt
  • 92
jet or prop?
  • prop
loading alt
  • lb/ft²
empty weight alt
  • 2376.0
plane or copter?
  • plane
ceiling alt
  • 21000.0
variants with their own articles
Crew
  • 2
Armament
  • * 1 × fixed, forward-firing 7.92 mm LMG 08/15 with an interruptor gear *1 × 7.92 mm Parabellum MG14 machine gun on a ring mounting * 100 kg of bombs
Designer
  • Dr. Edmund Rumpler
ref
  • German Aircraft Of The First World War
abstract
  • The Rumpler C.IV was a German single-engine, two-seat reconnaissance biplane. The C.IV was a development of C.III with different tail surfaces and using a Mercedes D.IVa engine in place of C.III's Benz Bz.IV. In addition to the parent company, the aircraft was also built by Pfalz Flugzeugwerke as the Pfalz C.I. Another variant of the basic design was the Rumpler 6B-2 single-seat floatplane fighter, with a 120 kW (160 hp) Mercedes D.III engine, built for the Kaiserliche Marine (Imperial Navy). For a two-seater reconnaissance aircraft, Rumpler C.IV had an excellent performance, which enabled it to remain in front-line service until the end of World War I on the Western Front, as well as in Italy and Palestine. Its exceptional ceiling allowed pilots to undertake reconnaissance secure in the knowledge that few allied aircraft could reach it. For use during filming, Slingsby Sailplanes built two Slingsby T.58 Rumpler C.IV replicas. While these were visually similar to the original aircraft, they were structurally completely different, having a steel-tube fuselage structure and wooden wings, and being powered by a de Havilland Gipsy Major engine.