Special Hobby Aircraft 1/32 Fokker D II BiPlane Fighter Kit (New Tool)
In 1915, Fokker E.I, E.II and E.III monoplanes ruled skies over the Western Front. But their supremacy did not last long, they got obsolete quite soon afterward and stood no chance against new biplane fighter airplanes of the Allies which possessed much better performance. German designers were thus forced to try and find a suitable replacement type quickly. Martin Kreutzer, a Fokker’s designer, came with several varieties of a biplane fighter design designated as the M.17, one of which later reached production status and was known as the Fokker D.II. It was armed with one synchronized machine gun and the first machines of a total of 181 produced got to the front in the summer of 1916 and went on fighting until August 1917. However, beginning in very late 1916, they became to be employed on less exposed sections of the front or just to defend industrial centers against bombing raids of the Allies.
The kit contains three styrene sprues, two of them in short run standard, the third one is produced using metal molds and brings the smallest items of the kit. A photo-etched set and a windshield pre-printed on a piece of clear film are also offered in the kit. The decal sheet caters to two machines, the first had a black-and-white striped tail section and carried the name Dodo, the other was flown and also accidentally landed in neutral Switzerland by lieutenant Otto Dessloch (who later during WW2 reached the rank of General Colonel /Generaloberst and was awarded Knight Cross and Iron Cross with Oak Leaves.
The kit contains three styrene sprues, two of them in short run standard, the third one is produced using metal molds and brings the smallest items of the kit. A photo-etched set and a windshield pre-printed on a piece of clear film are also offered in the kit. The decal sheet caters to two machines, the first had a black-and-white striped tail section and carried the name Dodo, the other was flown and also accidentally landed in neutral Switzerland by lieutenant Otto Dessloch (who later during WW2 reached the rank of General Colonel /Generaloberst and was awarded Knight Cross and Iron Cross with Oak Leaves.