Fokker Eindecker fighters

Fokker Eindecker III
Captured Fokker E.III 210/16 in flight at Upavon, Wiltshire in 1916.
General information
TypeFighter
ManufacturerFokker
Designer
Martin Kreutzer
Number built416
History
First flight23 May 1915 (modified M.5 A.16/15 serving as a E.I prototype, flown by Otto Parschau)

The Fokker Eindecker fighters were a series of German World War I monoplane single-seat fighter aircraft designed by Dutch engineer Anthony Fokker. Developed in April 1915, the first Eindecker ("Monoplane") was the first purpose-built German fighter aircraft and the first aircraft to be fitted with a synchronization gear, enabling the pilot to fire a machine gun through the arc of the propeller without striking the blades. The Eindecker gave the German Army's Air Service (then the Fliegertruppen des deutschen Kaiserreiches) a degree of air superiority from July 1915 until early 1916. This period, during which Allied aviators regarded their poorly armed aircraft as "Fokker Fodder", became known as the "Fokker Scourge".