The one WWI plane
everyone knows is the
Fokker Dr.I, though it was built in limited numbers and had a short career. The Triplane's fame was boosted by its famous pilots, most from
Richtofen Geschwader, such as Manfred and Lothar von Richtofen and Werner Voss. After their introduction in August 1917, several triplanes were found to have broken up in mid-air and the type was grounded near the end of October. Corrections were made and the type resumed flights on November 10. The grounding slowed production though, and though there were projected to be 173 Dr.Is delivered by December, it was probably closer to thirty-three.
The triplane was quite maneuverable, but -- underpowered by the standards of the time -- it was also slow and lacked performance at altitude, so
Idflieg limited production to only 320 machines and they hit their peak in April 1918 with 171 Triplanes at the front. Due to von Richtofen's legend, the Dr.I will always remain iconic. It was flown by most of the famous German aces of the time, including Udet, von Tutscheck, Goering, and Voss.
The decision to use a rotary engine was not one of optimal performance; it was practicality, because inline engines were in short supply at the time if its design. After the superior Fokker D.VII made its appearance in summer of 1918, the Dr.Is were relegated to home-defense duties.
This model comes in both 1:144 and 1:285/6mm/1:288 scales. The 1:285 product comes with two aeroplanes. In Detail Plastic, they are joined by disposable links and include detachable translucent propeller disks. In PA12 material, they are joined on a disposable sprue.
For more details and gaming information, see
https://linen.miraheze.org/wiki/Fokker_Dr.I.