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WD.11

Germany · Pioneer Age (pre-1919)

WD.11 — Fixed Wing
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The Gotha WD.11 was a three-seat floatplane torpedo-bomber developed during World War I by Gothaer Waggonfabrik (Gotha) for the Imperial German Navy's Naval Air Service. The company's earlier Gotha WD.7 had been moderately successful as a training aircraft for torpedo tactics and it designed a larger and more powerful aircraft along the same general lines. The prototype was completed in 1916 and the aircraft entered service the following year. 17 examples were built and enjoyed limited success, sinking two British freighters in the North Sea. One squadron participated in Operation Albion in 1917 with limited effectiveness. Torpedo shortages and durability issues forced the WD.11s removal from active service in 1918. Fewer than half survived to be inventoried by the Allies after the war.

Specifications

Category
Fixed Wing
Domain
Defence
Era
Pioneer Age (pre-1919)
Country
Germany
Operator
Imperial German Navy
Service Entry
1916
Produced
17
Engine
2× water-cooled, straight-six engines
Thrust / Power
160 hp each
Length (ft)
44
Empty Weight (lb)
4731
MTOW (lb)
7899
Service Ceiling (ft)
10499
Range (mi)
311
Max Speed (mph)
75