PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Gotha WD.2
rdfs:comment
  • {| |} The Gotha WD.2 (for Wasser Doppeldecker - "Water Biplane") and its derivatives were a family of military reconnaissance aircraft produced in Germany just before and during the early part of World War I. It was a development of the Avro 503 that had been built under licence by Gotha as the WD.1, and like it, was a conventional three-bay biplane with tandem, open cockpits. The landing gear comprised twin pontoons and dispensed with the small pontoon carried under the tail of the WD.1. Machines built for the German Navy were unarmed, but those supplied to the Ottoman aviation squadrons carried a 7.92 mm (.312 in) machine gun in a ring mount on the upper wing, accessible to the observer, whose seat was located directly below it.
owl:sameAs
empty weight kg
  • 1050
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
range km
  • 670
ceiling ft
  • 10500
met or eng?
  • met
range miles
  • 416
eng1 type
gross weight kg
  • 1487
length in
  • 5
primary user
Type
  • Reconnaissance seaplane
eng1 kW
  • 112
wing area sqft
  • 630
height m
  • 4.100000
Height in
  • 5
span m
  • 16.430000
Manufacturer
max speed kmh
  • 112
empty weight lb
  • 2315
ceiling m
  • 3200
length m
  • 10.500000
max speed mph
  • 69
National Origin
  • Germany
length ft
  • 34
Height ft
  • 13
First Flight
  • April
more users
span ft
  • 53
gross weight lb
  • 3278
span in
  • 11
wing area sqm
  • 58.500000
Crew
  • Two, pilot and observer
eng1 hp
  • 150
Designer
eng1 number
  • 1
abstract
  • {| |} The Gotha WD.2 (for Wasser Doppeldecker - "Water Biplane") and its derivatives were a family of military reconnaissance aircraft produced in Germany just before and during the early part of World War I. It was a development of the Avro 503 that had been built under licence by Gotha as the WD.1, and like it, was a conventional three-bay biplane with tandem, open cockpits. The landing gear comprised twin pontoons and dispensed with the small pontoon carried under the tail of the WD.1. Machines built for the German Navy were unarmed, but those supplied to the Ottoman aviation squadrons carried a 7.92 mm (.312 in) machine gun in a ring mount on the upper wing, accessible to the observer, whose seat was located directly below it. In an attempt to increase performance, one WD.2 was built with a reduced wingspan and its Benz Bz.III engine replaced with the more powerful Mercedes D.III. Designated the WD.5, no further examples were built in this configuration, but it served as the pattern for the WD.9, built in a small series. This differed from the WD.5 prototype in having a trainable 7.92 mm (.312 in) machine gun located in the rear cockpit, to which the observer had been relocated. One such aircraft was supplied to the German Navy, with the rest of the batch going to Turkey, albeit with the less powerful engine of the WD.2. The last member of the family to be built in any quantity was the D.III-powered WD.12, an unarmed version which featured greater attention to streamlining the aircraft, most especially around the engine area, which was now provided with a close-fitting cowl and a spinner for the propeller. Again, this type was supplied to both Germany and the Ottoman Empire. It was followed in production by a small number of WD.13s, essentially similar but for the use again of the less powerful Bz.III. Finally, two WD.15s were built after a considerable redesign of the aircraft. These had plywood-covered fuselages, as opposed to the fabric covering used on all earlier members of the family, and were fitted with Mercedes D.IVa engines.