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CL.I | |
---|---|
Role | Escort Fighter/Ground Attack Aircraft |
Manufacturer | Bayerische Flugzeugwerke (BFW) |
First flight | April 1918 (CL.I) July 1918 (CL.II) |
Primary user | Imperial German Army Air Service |
Number built | 2 × CL.I/CL.II, 1 × CL.III |
The BFW CL.I was a prototype German escort fighter aircraft of World War I.
The CL.I first flew April 1918, but was considered to be inferior in performance to the Hannover CL.V. Thus, improvements were made and the aircraft was returned to BFW, fitted with a lighter fuselage and redesignated CL.Ia. Results of tests performed on 14 September 1918 were declared unsatisfactory. BFW commenced a redesign of the CL.Ia to produce an entirely new aircraft, the CL.III, of which a single prototype was built but not flown due to the Armistice of November 1918. A further development of the BFW CL.III, the CL.IV, remained a paper project only.
The second CL.I prototype (known as Type 18 by BFW) was fitted with a 175 hp (130 kW) MAN Mana III six-cylinder in-line engine and designated CL.II, with test flights in July 1918.
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
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