But their dominance did not last long, they soon became obsolete and had no chance against the new, much more powerful biplane fighters of the Allies.
The German designers were therefore forced to quickly find a suitable replacement type.
Martin Kreutzer, a Fokker designer, produced several variants of a biplane fighter designated M.17, one of which later went into production and became known as the Fokker D.II.
It was armed with a synchronised machine gun, and the first of the 181 machines produced arrived at the front in the summer of 1916 and fought until August 1917.
From the end of 1916, however, they were deployed to less exposed sections of the front or served only to defend industrial centres against Allied bombing.
Plastic model kit
- with photoetched parts
unbuilt / unpainted
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