Halberstadt CLS.I explained
The Germania C.I was a prototype two-seat general-purpose biplane built by Halberstadt during World War I.
Design and development
Halberstadt based the CLS.I on the earlier CL.IV design, with modifications including a modified wing profile of a lower curvature and a more streamlined rear fuselage. All these improvements were introduced to obtain a higher flight speed, (hence "S" in CLS standing for schnell, meaning "fast" in German). The prototype flew on 2 October 1918, but the aircraft didn't enter production due to the Armistice.
Halberstadt had plans for derivatives of the CLS.I armed with revolver cannon, the CLS II and CLS X, but these designs never left the drawing board by the end of World War I.[1]
Further reading
- Book: Treadwell . Terry . German and Austro-Hungarian aircraft manufacturers 1908-1918 . Amberley Pub . 978-1445601021.
- Book: Angelucci . Enzo . The Rand McNally encyclopedia of military aircraft, 1914-1980 . 1983 . Military Press . San Diego . 0-517-41021-4.
- Book: Cowin . H.W. . German and Austrian aviation of World War I : a pictorial chronicle of the airmen and aircraft that forged German airpower . 2000 . Osprey Pub . Oxford . 1-84176-069-2.
- Book: Van Wyngarden . G. . Early German aces of World War I . 2000 . Osprey Pub. . Oxford . 1-84176-997-5.
Notes and References
- Book: Gray, Peter . Thetford . Owen . German Aircraft of the First World War . limited . 1970 . Putnam . London . 0-370-00103-6 . 2nd . 421.