IAF-BAE-16
What does this stand for?
Furthermore, I feel like noting that without good engines, we won't be going anywhere substantial, and thus I feel we should get a relatively early start on some better engines. In addition to that, I feel like contributing a bit. Thus I propose the following to be reviewed in the future, as I'll be away in Italy for the near future (for a week, lol).
Proposed name for the Airforce: The
Kaiserliche Komitee der Luftfahrt / Luftfahrtkomitee, meaning the Imperial Committee of Aeronautics / Aeronautical Committee. It fits the Imperial Bureaucracy we're under and stresses our role. Plus it sounds pretty damn cool.
AvD Motors Dehnert SMT 915 (Sternmotor-Triebwerk (Radial Engine Powerplant))
Andreas Wilhelm von Dehnert, the son of a renown physicist, was an engineer and an industrial designer, but before all else, he was a simple man with the goal of providing small, high-speed and high-power engines for various locomotive contraptions. He spent his early days under the tutelage of his father, whom first introduced him to the works of various mechanical engineers. While they had dabbled in single-cylinder engines before the turn of the century, their most significant accomplishment had been a single cylinder engine used to create motor-powered bicycles. This all changed following the Wright brothers' first flight in 1901, as he then set it as his task to produce a reliable, powerful engine so as to further this new, promising technology. Following the onset of the war, this enthusiasm was directed by his partner,
Stefan Utrecht - an industrialist, into attempting a contract with various aircraft manufacturers in the hopes of attaining government support and, in Utrecht's case, funds to open other lines of business using the same engines, using the prestige warranted by their service so as to boost profits and make a name for themselves.
The proposal, thus, comes from the so-called
'AvD Automotive Company', presenting the plans for a 9-cylinder water-cooled radial engine with a goal power rating of between 160 and 200 hp at 1400 RPM, promising a lightweight engine which would be relatively cheap, highly reliable and immensely responsive, allowing pilots to focus more on their flying and on the enemy than the state of the engine.
- With this, we could focus on more fine things, like maneuverability (flaps, a better grasp of aerodynamics etc.) and be pretty safe in the early game.
The thing's inspired by this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmson_water-cooled_aero-engines#PerformanceAnd really, radials were widely used for a reason.