I agree but there were others that were just as good also though.
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a-17 said:the greatest ace of world war one1 was the red baron.known for shooting down 80 allied aircraft,red baron was among the most great aces ever.it was known for its name for the red dv1111 he flew.
bomber said:The quality of the oponents B von R shot down was often questioned by fellow German pilots..
That is to say in a time of chivalry... he played outside the rules, or rather wrote new ones.
regards
Simon
bomber said:Don't get me wrong I'm not disrespecting the man it's just that we, and this thread has romantised this era of aviation combat..
We think about it as 'Knights of the sky' dueling in combat.... Acts of chivalry, pilots pairing off and fighting across the sky... when they run out of ammo they wave fairwell and head back for base, a glass of claret and a singsong around the old piano.
Now this did happen but let's be sure we're attributing the right characteristics to the correct pilots... because B Von R was a colded blooded killer who liked nothing better than attacking scout planes... A pilot that required that his tail be kept clean of the enemy by his fellow pilots... He was not a dualist, he was not chivalric.
He was an entirely new bread of pilot, unseen before, who brought a more proffesional aproach to aviation combat which gave results.
We all value the judgement of our piers and although there no doubt was an element of jealousy.. his piers did not think of him that favourably in life,,, in death maybe.
I'm not out to cause a fight, it's just that at a time when boys went up in planes who's life expectancy was measured in minutes.... unlike the romatised view we have of 'giving the other guy a fair chance'... that was not his style.
And as an interesting footnote, historians and strategists have attributed the subsequent 'hero worship' of B von R by luftwaffe pilots, as the root cause of their failure to win the BoB in WWII...
Regards
Simon
"I treat my plane like my woman. I get in her 3 times a day and take her to heavan and back.... wahhhha !"
Captain Flashheart
They are royalty in my mind
Just about. What I think is wiered about it though is the fact that WW1 aviation was still like the chivelrous days of the Nights on Horse Back. It really is a glorious time.
bomber said:Sorry Hunter, you're clearly not objective in this...
I'm not after a fight.. and I've said so... but the romatasised view of the man is not the reality.
This is the common popular belief about the period, and for some pilots this was true...
But I find it disrespectfull to those that did fight and die this way to attribute these characteristic to someone who didn't....
Try looking at what I've said,,
Simon
Erich said:back on topic guys .........
I can think of many aces but one strikes me with his agressive go get em nature, 40 victory and Pour le Merit winner Hauptmann Karl Menckhoff, flying in Jasta 3 and finishing in Jasta 72 shot down behind enemy lines on the 23rd of August 1918 escaped a week later and walked to Switzerland where he set up his own business until his death in 1948.
machs gut !