Nieuport 11

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Nieuport 11
Nieuport 11 WoW.JPG
A replica Nieuport 11 in Italian colours
Role Fighter
Manufacturer Nieuport
Designer Gustave Delage
Introduction 5 January 1916
Status retired
Primary users Aéronautique Militaire (France)
Corpo Aeronautico Militare (Italy), Imperial Russian Air Service

The Nieuport 11, nicknamed the Bébé, was a French World War I single seat fighter aircraft, designed by Gustave Delage.[1] It was the primary aircraft that ended the 'Fokker Scourge' in 1916.[2]

The type saw service with several of France's allies, and gave rise to the series of "vee-strut" Nieuport fighters that remained in service (latterly as trainers) into the 1920s.

Design and development

The Nieuport 11 was a smaller, simplified version of the Nieuport 10, designed specifically as a single-seat fighter. Like the "10" the "11" was a sesquiplane, a biplane with a full-sized top wing with two spars, and a lower wing of much narrower chord and a single spar. Interplane struts in the form of a "Vee" joined the wings together. The sesquiplane layout reduces drag and improves the rate of climb, as well as offering a better view from the cockpit than either biplane or monoplane, while being substantially stronger than contemporary monoplanes. The narrow lower wing may be subject to aeroelastic flutter at high air speeds, a problem that manifested itself on the much faster German Albatros D.III and the later "vee-strut" Nieuport fighters[3] however no known failures can be connected to the Nieuport 11 or 16. A single example of the Nieuport 11 was modified with a smaller lower wing and canted interplance struts but no further development ensued.

Nieuport 11 C.1 in Belgian service

Nieuport 11s were supplied to the French Aéronautique Militaire, the British Royal Naval Air Service, the Imperial Russian Air Service, Belgium, and Italy. 646 Nieuport 11s were produced by the Italian Macchi company under licence,[3] and additional Nieuport 16s were built under licence in Russia by Dux. When Romania suffered military setbacks and needed aircraft, several RNAS Nieuport 11s, along with Nieuport 12s were provided.

Nieuport 16

In 1916 an improved version appeared as the Nieuport 16 which was a strengthened Nieuport 11 airframe powered by a 110 hp (92 kW) Le Rhône 9J rotary engine.[2] Visible differences included a larger aperture in front of the "horse shoe" cowling and a headrest for the pilot.[3] Later versions had a fuselage-mounted synchronized Vickers gun, but in this configuration the combined effect of the heavier 9J engine and the Vickers gun compromised maneuverability[3] and made the craft nose-heavy. The Nieuport 16 was an interim type pending the delivery of the slightly larger Nieuport 17 C.1 which was designed for the heavier engine and machine gun with a new, full-perimeter ring cowl, and remedied the 16's balance problems, as well as improving performance.[4]

Operational history

Royal Naval Air Service Nieuport 11
Nieuport 16 with Le Prieur rockets

The Nieuport 11 reached the French front in January 1916, and 90 were in service within the month.

This small, sesquiplane outclassed the Fokker Eindecker in every respect, including speed, climb rate and maneuverability. It featured ailerons for lateral control rather than the Fokker's wing warping, giving lighter, quicker roll response, and its elevator was attached to a conventional tail plane as opposed to the all-moving, balanced "Morane type" stabilators of the Fokker which provided better pitch control. The Fokker's success was solely due to its synchronized machine gun which fired forward through the arc of its propeller. At the time, the Allies lacked a similar system, and the Nieuport 11's Lewis machine gun[note 1] was mounted to fire over the propeller, achieving similar results. The Lewis was not synchronizable, due to its open bolt firing cycle design which resulted in an uneven firing rate, which couldn't then be synchronized to miss the rotating propeller blades. Clearing gun jams and replacing ammunition drums in flight were challenging though, and the drums limited ammunition supply. This was eventually resolved in French service by the application of the Alkan synchronization gear with a Vickers machine gun to Nieuport fighters starting with some later examples of the Nieuport 16. The British, in the absence of their own satisfactory synchronizer, continued with the overwing Lewis but employed a new "double" Lewis drum with a capacity of 98 rounds.[4]

During the course of the Battle of Verdun in February 1916, the combination of the Nieuport 11s technical advantages which were largely shared with the earlier Nieuport 10 single seat fighters, and the concentration of the fighters within the first dedicated fighter units allowed the French to establish air superiority, forcing radical changes in German tactics.

Some Nieuport 11s and 16s were fitted to fire Le Prieur rockets from the struts for attacks on observation balloons and airships.[3]

By March 1916 the Bébé was being replaced by the improved Nieuport 17, although Italian-built examples remained in first line service longer, as did Russian examples. Thereafter the Nieuport 11s and 16 continued to be widely used as trainers.[3]

Variants

Nieuport 11
Single-seat fighter/scout biplane. Also known as the Nieuport Bebe or Nieuport Scout although these were used for any Nieuport fighter.
Nieuport 16
Improved version powered by a 110 hp (92 kW) Le Rhone 9J rotary piston engine.

Operators

Top WW1 Italian ace Francesco Baracca with his Nieuport 11
 Belgium 
 France 
 Kingdom of Italy 
 Netherlands 
 Romania 
 Russian Empire 
 United Kingdom
Original Nieuport 11 Bébé on display at the Musée de l'Air in France

Survivors and reproductions

  • the Musée de l'Air at le Bourget in Paris has the sole original surviving Nieuport 11, currently marked as N556 with the personal markings of Commandant Charles Tricornot de Rose, holder of the first military pilot licence. It had previously been marked as N976.[6]

Specifications (Nie 11)

Nieuport 11 3-view drawing
Nieuport 16 3-view drawing

Data from "The Worlds Greatest Aircraft"[2]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament

See also

Related development
Aircraft of comparable role, configuration and era
Related lists

List of military aircraft of France

References

  1. http://www.vazduhoplovnetradicijesrbije.rs/index.php/istorija/102-nijepor-11
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Chant & Taylor 2007, p. 14.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Fitzsimons 1967/1969, p. 1989.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Cheeseman 1960, p. 92.
  5. Bruce 1982, p.326.
  6. Rimell, 1990, p.86
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Notes

  1. A few aircraft were at first fitted with Hotchkiss guns and, in Italian service, with the Fiat-Revelli until the Lewis was available in sufficient numbers.

Bibliography

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  • Chant, Christopher and Michael J.H. Taylor. The World's Greatest Aircraft. Edison, NJ: Cartwell Books Inc., 2007. ISBN 0-7858-2010-8.
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  • Cooksley, Peter. Nieuport Fighters in Action. Carrollton, Texas: Squadron/Signal Publications, 1997. ISBN 0-89747-377-9.
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  • Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of the 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. London: Purnell & Sons Ltd., 1967/1969. ISBN 0-8393-6175-0.
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  • Janić Č, Petrović O, Short History of Aviation in Serbia, Beograd, Aerokomunikacije, 2011. ISBN 978-86-913973-2-6.
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