Several.
Manfred von Richtofen a.k.a. The Red Baron, choose a military career in a Uhlan Cavalry unit following in his father's footsteps at the outbreak of war in 1914. The use of the machine gun quickly made cavalry units, on horse back at least an out dated military weapon. He made a transfer to the German Imperial Air Service as an observer where he scored his first "kill" but it was an unconfirmed downed enemy plane.
Richtofen began his flying career as a pilot of an observation aircraft. When Germany's lead ace Boelcke asked him to join their squadron, he flew an Albatros D-II. The D-III model came out shortly later and had a weakness of tearing its wings off in high stress dives and maneuvers. Richtofen nearly experienced when his D-III broke a wing spar causing him to lose faith in the aircraft. He switched to the Halberstadt D-II for a time before returning to the Albatros D-III when the lower wing spar was strengthen. By this time Boelcke was dead, killed in a mid-air collision with another German pilot during a dogfight. Boelcke had 40 victories at his death.
Richtofen eventually flew an all-red Albatros D-III. His old cavalry's unit color was red and as a tribute to it but also for identification in the air by his fellow airmen and also the enemy.He received a head wound while flying in combat in an Albatros and he suffered headaches and fatigue from it for the rest of his life. This occurred in 1917 when a bullet grazed his skull.
Anthony Fokker developed the Fokker Dr.1 triplane, and one of the first ones was assigned to Richtofen. Later, he flew one that had the green wash but had the upper wing, nose, wheels and tail painted red. Richtofen flew several Dr-1s issued to his Jadgstaffel. The Fokker triplane the one Anthony Fokker first gave him, he lent to a friend Curt Wolff, who was killed in it during combat with Sopwith Camels. Wolff had 33 victories at the time of his death.
In the beginning of 1918, Germany held their trials for new aircraft designs for government contracts. One of these was the Fokker D VII and Richtofen was asked to fly it and give his recommendations. He liked the plane and help win the contract for Anthony Fokker, but he didn't live to fly it in combat. Richtofen would be dead by the time the production model was made available.
Richtofen flew and later died in an all-red Fokker Dr.1on April 21, 1918.
100
There has been a number of investigations over the last 20 years as well as countless books on "Who killed the Red Baron". Although A. Roy Brown claimed he had hit the Red Baron's plane and he went down as Brown turned to fly away and leave the scene, the Baron continued to chase Brown's friend, Lt. May for over a mile or more until ground fire from Australian infantry shot him down. There were several machine gunners and numerous individual solders on the ground that poured lead into the air trying to bring the Baron down. The Red Baron was killed by one round from a 303 caliber round that struck him on his right side, apparently hit his heart and exited slightly below his left nipple in his chest. The Baron managed to land the plane without crashing it, but died shortly after he touched down. No one can really ever prove who killed the Baron, but being that only ONE bullet hole was observed on the right side of his plane that lined up with the wound in his body, its quite possible that an individual rifleman in the Australian infantry brought down the Baron.
Richthofen flew a number of aircraft during the war. None of them were particularity special. Some had superior climbing ability or reliability. It was the Baron's skill in both flying and shooting accuracy that made him a superior fighter pilot. But the Baron's greatest skill was his self-discipline. He helped develop many of the techniques used even today, for air warfare.
The Red Baron, Baron Manfred von Richtofen was Germany's top ace in WW 1. He shot down 80 enemy aircraft. He was killed in air combat. It was a day of national mourning in Germany when he was killed in his tri-winged fighter.
The Red Baron did not use a symbol. Instead he painted his airplane entirely Red so he would stand out with the enemy and with his fellow airmen. However, he did NOT paint all his planes all-Red. His first was an Albatros D-III. Then he flew the Fokker Triplane but not just one. The last one he flew was all RED. The highest scoring ace of Austria-Hungary painted his Albatros all Red just like the Red Baron. But he painted Skulls on his plane. He painted relatively small skulls just behind his cockpit: one on the left, one on the right and one on the top.
Germany's Red Baron flew a peculiar type of fighter plane in World War One. It had three wings and was called the Fokker DR1 triplane.
He was a soldier and was sent to fight.
The name Red Baron originated from Baron Manfred Von Richthofen. The Baron flew a Fokker Plane that was painted red, he was a WWI German Pilot that died at the age of 25 years.
I assume you are asking what type aircraft was the red plan flown by "the Red Baron"?The Red Baron was flying a Fokker Dr.1 Triplane when he was killed.
The WW1 German fighter-ace Manfred von Richthofen was known as the "Red Baron" because his plane was painted red .
Yes she does but that show finished in 2004
100
he was an observer at the back of a plane in 1915
you pop his bubble on the back of his plane
In the comic strip "Peanuts," Snoopy sometimes imagines himself as the Red Baron, a World War I flying ace. He dons a pilot's cap and pretends to fly his doghouse as a fighter plane, engaging in imaginary battles with his nemesis, the Red Baron. This alter ego showcases Snoopy's playful and imaginative nature.
Snoopy doesn't fly a plane, but he likes to imagine that his dog-house is a Sopwith Camel, a British World War I fighter plane. he does fly a plane but we dont know what kind he flyes by susan williams
Mate You cannot DRIVE a plane You fly a plane To answer your question Kirsty Moore was the first Woman to fly with the Red Arrows.