The Aerodrome Home Page
Aces of WWI
Aircraft of WWI
Books and Videos
The Aerodrome Forum
Help
WWI Web Sites
Medals & Decorations
Search The Aerodrome
Today in History



"A great deal of an aeroplane could be holed without affecting its ability to fly. Wings and fuselage could be—and often were—pierced in 50 places, missing the occupants by inches (blissfully unaware of how close it had come until they returned to base). Then the sailmaker would carefully cover each hole with a square inch of Irish linen frayed at the edges and with a brushful of dope make our aircraft 'serviceable' again within an hour." Farewell to Wings by Lewis, Cecil
 
WWI Aircraft Serial Number:

Viewing all records: 17456
  Serial # Aircraft Unit Pilots/Observers
28.37 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Flik 24 Josef Kiss
28.38 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Flik 12D Benno Fiala von Fernbrugg
  Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Frank Linke-Crawford
28.39 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Godwin Brumowski
28.40 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Godwin Brumowski
  Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Benno Fiala von Fernbrugg
  Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Flik 41J Frank Linke-Crawford
28.41 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Godwin Brumowski
28.42 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Flik 42J Ferdinand Udvardy
28.44 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Frank Linke-Crawford
28.47 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Karl Nikitsch
28.57 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Flik 41J Godwin Brumowski
28.58 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Flik 42J Johann Risztics
28.60 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I
28.65 Hansa-Brandenburg D.I Godwin Brumowski
 
90 | 91 | 92 | 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104
First Previous Next Last
 
Aces · Aircraft · Books · Forum · Help · Links · Medals · Search · Today

Copyright 1997-2025 The Aerodrome. All rights reserved.