Lebed XI was the designation applied to a number of reconnaissance aircraft supplied to the Imperial Russian Air Force by the Lebed factory of St Petersburg during World War I. Rather than representing any one particular type of aircraft, or even aircraft of Lebed's own design, the designation covered a variety of different German Albatros aircraft that had been brought down behind Russian lines and captured.

Type XI
Role Reconnaissance aircraft
National origin Russia
Manufacturer Lebed
Primary user Imperial Russian Air Force
Number built ca 10-12

History

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The St Petersburg Aviation Company began manufacturing Lebed XI based on aircraft captured by the Imperial Russian Air Service in 1915.[1] Lebed repaired or rebuilt these machines and returned them to service on the Russian side. A prototype was successfully air tested on December 28, 1915.[1] While 225 aircraft were ordered, only ten Lebed XI aircraft were built and entered service for the Imperial Russian army air service.[1][2] These were designed as reconnaissance and artillery airplanes and resembled the Albatros B-category biplane.[2]

Several Russian aircraft were built based on the Lebed XI. These include the Lebed-LM1, Lebed XII, and Lebed XIII.[1][3]

Subtypes from A1 through A8 were assigned to identify different Albatros designs supplied. As replacements for the damaged water-cooled engines used on the German aircraft were hard to come by, Lebed eventually fitted Salmson radial engines to some airframes.


Operators

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  Russia

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Sutton, Alan; Wood, Alan C. (2017). Military Aviation of the First World War. Fonthill Media.
  2. ^ a b Chant, Chris (2012). Austro-Hungarian Aces of World War 1. Osprey Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-78200-890-3.
  3. ^ Kelly, Maurice (2009). Russian Motor Vehicles: The Czarist Period 1784 to 1917. Veloce Publishing Ltd. p. 54. ISBN 978-1-84584-213-0.