Sopwith Camel
| Sopwith Camel
|
 Modern replica of a Sopwith Camel
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| Description
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| Role | fighter
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| Crew | 1
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| First Flight |
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| Entered Service | July 1917
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| Manufacturer | Sopwith Aviation Company
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| Dimensions
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| Length | 18 ft 9 in | 5.7 m
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| Wingspan | 28 ft | 8.5 m
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| Height | 8 ft 6 in | 2.5 m
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| Wing area | ft² | m²
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| Weights
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| Empty | 950 lb | 430 kg
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| Loaded | 1482 lb | 672 kg
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| Maximum takeoff | lb | kg
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| Capacity |
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| Powerplant
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| Engine | Gnome 9 cylinder rotary engine
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| Power | 150 hp | 110 kW
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| Thrust | N/A | N/A
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| Performance
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| Maximum speed | 115 mph | 180 km/h
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| Stall Speed | 50 knots | 92.6 km/h
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| range | miles | km
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| Ferry range | 300 miles | 483 km
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| Service ceiling | 21,000 ft | 6,400 m
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| Rate of climb | ft/min | m/min
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| Wing loading | lb/ft² | kg/m²
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| Thrust/Weight |
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| Power/Mass | hp/lb | kW/kg
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| Avionics
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| Avionics |
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| Armament
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| Guns | two Vickers 0.303-in (7.7-mm) machine guns
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| Bombs | [none]
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| Missiles | [none]
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| Rockets | [none]
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| Other | [none]
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The Sopwith Camel was a British World War I single-seat fighter aircraft. The Sopwith Camel was first built in 1916 by the Sopwith Aviation Company. Approximately 6,000 Camels were produced. It featured a 150-hp (110-kW) Gnome nine-cylinder rotary engine, and it was armed with two Vickers .303-in (7.7-mm) machine guns mounted in front of the cockpit, firing forward through the propeller disc. It was capable of reaching a speed of 115 mph (185 km/h). There was a fairing surrounding the gun installation which created a hump. It was this hump that led to the aircraft acquiring the name Camel.
The strong gyroscopic effect of the rotary engine resulted in strange handling, and the Camel was notoriously difficult to fly in the hands of a novice (many were crashed due to mishandling on landing approach). The plane was intentionally built unstable so that to keep it flying straight the pilot had to compensate all the time. This made the plane more difficult to fly, but it also made it more agile. This agility in combat made the Sopwith Camel one of the best remembered Allied aircraft of World War I.
Overall, it shot down 1294 enemy aircraft.
The Sopwith Camel was frequently referenced as the "plane" of Snoopy in the Peanuts comic strip, when he imagined himself as a WWI flying ace and the nemesis of the Red Baron.
de:Sopwith F-1
ja:ソッピースキャメル
fr:Sopwith Camel
Sopwith Camel is also the name of a 1960s psychedelic rock music band from San Francisco, California.
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