Fokker · Fixed Wing / Fighter · Netherlands · Pioneer Age (pre-1919)
The Fokker K.I, company designation M.9, was a German experimental biplane built during World War I by the Fokker-Flugzeugwerke. It was intended to meet a need by the Fliegertruppen des deutschen Kaiserreiches for an aircraft that could defend itself against Entente fighters armed with machine guns. Fokker had had only limited resources available for the project and Anthony Fokker, the company's owner, could not devote a lot of time or material to the K.I, given the demands on his time and the company's resources. The limited flight testing conducted by Fokker revealed multiple problems with the aircraft's center of gravity and structural strength. Resolving these issues was beyond Fokker's abilities at that time and he ordered the K.I scrapped.