Thread: Rumpler Taube
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Old 9 January 2006, 11:47 AM #4 (permalink)
Old Man
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A Little More, sir

First, regarding machine-gun armament of Taubes. My recollection of a passage in Mr. John Morrow's "Building German Airpower, 1910-1914" was not quite accurate. Mr. Morrow states the Taube offered an excellent field of fire for a machine-gun, in a paragraph that gives the views of Maj. Siegert on the suitability of differing types of aeroplane for miltary usage before the war began. The paragraph is sourced to documents of the Miltary Science Department of the German Air Force (KAdL), but it is not clear whether the comment concerning field of fire is Maj. Siegert's or the author's. In Col. John de Vries' old monograph "Taube, Dove of War", the author says: "Vague references to machine-gun armed Taubes are to be found in 1912 French publications and 'Flugsport' of 1914." He also notes three references from "Flight" between Nov. 1914 and April 1915 to Taubes armed with machine-guns or "quick-firing" guns. His final word, though, is that no positive verification exists, and that certainly no photograph of a Taube so equipped has ever come to light, at least by the late seventies. I am quite inclined to discount the "Flight" references entirely, and put little weight on the French press of 1912 either. "Flugsport" might have been a little better informed, but I suspect "puffery" in any such account in 1914. There may also have been some confusion between such monoplane experiments as Schnieder's armed L.V.G. monoplane, or Fokker A-types fitted with stocked and extended barreled Mauser automatic pistols, photographs of which do survive, and Taubes, given the emblematic associations "Taube" acquired.

Col. de Vries says that bomb racks on Taubes are confirmed, and frequently referenced, and includes a photograph of a Rumpler Taube flown by Lt. Canter so equipped. I do not have a scanner available, but I believe the photograph could be found in circulation. The rack is directly under the observer's cockpit on the center-line, and seems to consist of a bar along the axis of the fuselage, from which several cages extend downwards, holding bombs vertically, nose down. The photograph shows two "Carbonite" missiles, but it seems to my eye, anyway, that there are two empty holders there as well. But it is difficult to judge, given the shadow and the clutter of the undercarriage and bracings in the small reproduction.

I understand the "Windsock" people have recently released a "Taubes at War" monograph, but I have not purchased it yet, and it might shed some further light on the matter for you.
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