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Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed Photo and paint job courtesy Craig 'CrashCraig' at wingsofwar.org

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Photo and paint job courtesy Craig 'CrashCraig' at wingsofwar.org
Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed Photo and paint job courtesy Craig 'CrashCraig' at wingsofwar.org
Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed Photo and paint job courtesy Craig 'CrashCraig' at wingsofwar.org

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Not a Photo

Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed Computer render of 1:144 Hanriot HD.1
Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed Computer render of 1:144 Hanriot HD.1

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Not a Photo

Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed
Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales) 3d printed

DIGITAL PREVIEW
Not a Photo

Hanriot HD.1 (centered Vickers, various scales)

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Product Description
The nimble Hanriot H.D.1 was never accepted by France's Aviation Militaire, probably because it used the same engine as the Nieuport 16 and 17, which was already in production. It found great proponents, though, in Italy and Belgium and (after the war) Switzerland. It was unusual in having pronounced dihedral in the upper wing but none in the lower, a design which may have improved pilot sight lines.

Seventy-nine HD.1s were ordered by Belgium and the supplied First Escadrille starting in August 1917, and as they arrived HD.1s were used by most Belgian fighter escadrilles. Ninth and Eleventh used HD.1s through the end of the war.

In Italy, the HD.1 was found to be superior to the Nieuport 17 and Italian pilots were impressed with this strength and agility. It was officially adopted in November 1916, and Italian production began in the winter of 1916-1917, beginning with an order of 100 with Macchi.  76ª Squadriglia received their first on August 1717 and the by November they were in use by eight squadriglia. Italian pilots praised its high maneuverability, sturdiness, and light touch on the controls. Early models had the gun offset, but later models moved it to the center of the fuselage-top to improve aiming.

By the Armistice it was still in service with about eighteen squadriglia, sometimes mixed with other types, including one in Macedonia and another in Albania. Seventeen hundred Italian HD.1s were ordered and 831 were delivered before the Armistice.

This model reflects an HD.1 with the centered Vickers gun and deeper French-style fin.  Another version has an offset Vickers and the shallower Macchi-style fin.  It comes in both 1:144 and 1:285/6mm/1:288 scales.  The 1:285 model contains two aeroplanes, joined by disposable links.  In Detail Plastic they include a detachable translucent propeller disk, which you can use or discard as you like.

For more details and gaming information, see https://linen.miraheze.org/wiki/Hanriot_H.D.1.
Details
What's in the box:
HanHD1-Bl-144
Dimensions:
6.06 x 4.09 x 1.85 cm
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2.39 x 1.61 x 0.73 inches
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Rating:
Mature audiences only.
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