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This document provides details about the Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2, a British single-engine biplane used during World War I for reconnaissance and light bombing. It describes the aircraft's introduction in 1912, its versatility in different roles, and notes that despite shortcomings it played an important role early in the war. The summary also mentions that there were six versions and it provided advantages like reconnaissance ability but also disadvantages like fragility.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views6 pages

Report

This document provides details about the Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2, a British single-engine biplane used during World War I for reconnaissance and light bombing. It describes the aircraft's introduction in 1912, its versatility in different roles, and notes that despite shortcomings it played an important role early in the war. The summary also mentions that there were six versions and it provided advantages like reconnaissance ability but also disadvantages like fragility.

Uploaded by

oponce
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Untitled
by Orlando Ponce

General metrics
2,908 490 24 1 min 57 sec 3 min 46 sec
characters words sentences reading speaking
time time

Score Writing Issues

87 18 18
Issues left Critical Advanced

This text scores better than 87%


of all texts checked by Grammarly

Unique Words 41%


Measures vocabulary diversity by calculating the unique words
percentage of words used only once in your
document

Rare Words 29%


Measures depth of vocabulary by identifying words rare words
that are not among the 5,000 most common English
words.

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Word Length 4.6


Measures average word length characters per word

Sentence Length 20.4


Measures average sentence length words per sentence

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Untitled
World War I plane Royal Aircraft was a single-engine and
a two-seater. It was introduced in August 1914 and the
first flight that this plane took was in February 1912.
There were only 3,500 of these Pacific aircraft that were
used.

The Royal Aircraft Factory B.E.2 was a British single-


engine biplane used as a reconnaissance aircraft and
light bomber during World War I. It was designed by
Geoffrey de Havilland for the Royal Aircraft Factory and
first flew in 1912. The B.E.2 proved to be a versatile
aircraft, with variants used for various tasks, including
aerial photography, artillery spotting, and even as a
fighter. However, its slow speed and lack of
maneuverability made it vulnerable to enemy attack, and
it was eventually replaced by more advanced aircraft.
Despite its shortcomings, the B.E.2 played an important
role in the early years of the war and was flown by many
notable pilots, including the famous British ace Albert
Ball. The Royal Aircraft B.E.2 was used by the Royal Flying

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Corps/Royal Air Force Aviation Military Belge and used


primarily for reconnaissance and observation ( though
some served as a single-seater bomber or fighters
throughout the war). The power and performance of the
Royal Aircraft B.E.2 had a top speed of 72mph, a range of
234 miles was the max distance it could make, and an
average rate of climb of 222/ per minute this pacific
aircraft. The majority of these planes were made by
private contractors and some were made in a public
factory.

Throughout the war, the use of aircraft was really popular


for them to be used as a weapon. There were six different
versions of the Royal Aircraft B.E.2. The majority of
planes in World War I were used by the British Army. In its
service for a few years, it played an important key role in
World War I. The advantage of the Royal Aircraft B.E.2 it

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was suitable for reconnaissance for the British Army on


the Western Front, was able to achieve automatic
stability, and could fly over trenches to photograph what
was happening behind the scenes. Many advantages of
the Royal Aircraft B.E.2 impacted the people who used
the plane in World War I.

Throughout the war, there were many disadvantages they


suffered from with these planes. 1. These aircraft were
very fragile and could break at any moment in time. 2.
They were unreliable but that's what they had to use. 3.
The planes had little power most heavier than an aircraft
lacking a parachute
for the pilot due to its weight, which affected the
performance of the plane. There were many
disadvantages that the Royal Aircraft B.E.2 and other
planes had during World War I.

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Western Fronts- was one of the main theatres of war


during World War I. Located in France, Belgium, Alsace,
and, Western Europe. Dating from August-4-1914 until
November-11-1918
Reconnaissance- Was military observation of a region to
locate an enemy's strategic features.

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