Talk:Fokker Scourge/Archive 1

Latest comment: 7 years ago by Soundofmusicals in topic Very latest new lead paragraph (17-3-17)
Archive 1 Archive 2

Current rewrite not at all satisfactory

This rather sketchy little article has had a rewrite. No doubt this was actually long overdue.

The problem is that it is now MUCH worse, if fact I am tempted to just revert it back to where it was and reapproach it from the ground up. Faults include the following:

  • In spite of numerous patches put in by other editors, it remains riddled with errors and "double-Dutch" - in other words sentences, even paragraphs that simply don't make sense, at least not in English. It bears all the hallmarks of having been (badly) copied from another source - either by translation from another language, or by paraphrasing without full comprehension - the result is often ambiguous, unclear, unencyclopedic, and just plain badly written.
  • The "re-writer" has apparently not read the article before re-writing it - so that a great deal of the new text duplicates and repeats the information already there.
  • Not all of the new matter is actually relevant to the subject.
  • Little if any of the new matter is referenced.

Sorry - but this is going to have to be re-done - and much of it is going to have to go. I would love it if someone else had a go at this - or even if the author of so many of the new changes had a look at things to rectify these problems. Otherwise it looks like a totally new re-write. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 08:55, 3 December 2012 (UTC)

Well, I've bin and gorn and dunnit! At least it's now actually about the subject of the article, and no longer an attempt to write a potted history of the world. Hope I haven't overdone the references. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 11:52, 23 February 2013 (UTC)
By the way - can we tidy those references (which repeat a lot) with a program or bot or something - or do we have to plough through the whole list naming them? --Soundofmusicals (talk) 12:12, 27 February 2013 (UTC)

"Current rewrite not at all satisfactory" - dito

I don't have the time for a protracted argument with you, but I have no idea what the f**k you are talking about. Firstly this was not even close to completion and was not "a re-write". How could anyone possibly think that? It was incomplete and basic summation.

How is it not relevant? What errors? be specific. I hadn't even got around to writing the detail. Repetitions will occur when old is to replaced with new. It ain't done yet.

I have no objection to you adding back your information - but don't wipe out the foundations put there. There is no reason to do so. It is relevant and provides context. Perhaps if you'd read it through you could see that. Dapi89 (talk) 19:30, 14 March 2013 (UTC)

I’ve recovered the old and new (yours). I've wiped out your layout; it was woefully inferior to the simple one that I put there. The detail you've put in is a welcome addition.
I've restored the background to the obvious and logical summary it should be, relating the very recent birth of aviation to the problems of air combat and why/how this period + battle was important to the 'big picture' as is reflected in the introduction, which is a better introduction than the one you replaced it with.
I’ve restored the military campaign box. It is ridiculous to take it out; what + where + when + casualties + commanders + forces involved...pretty self explanatory.

This is a step to an improved article, particularly with the new sources. Dapi89 (talk) 20:06, 14 March 2013 (UTC)

For the sake of the article (which is all I give a <naughty word expunged> about in this context) we obviously need to discuss some questions raised here in a sensible and rational manner. I would suggest that neither your feelings nor my (very considerable) ego have anything to do with the case. You left the article in a right "dogs-dinner" state for some months, and had no comment when I said precisely what I though of it. It was, frankly, SO bad I had to re-write it from the ground up. I put a great deal of patient research and effort into leaving the result reasonably comprehensive, and totally relevant, not to mention well-referenced. Your explanations about your own efforts being a "work-in-progress" do explain a lot, but your assumption that this was self-evident seems strange. In fairness I did suggest you might like to clean up the mess yourself, and allowed plenty of time for you to have started to do so. All I could see was an inadequate article converted into a thoroughly bad one - and my frank comments on the fact ignored. I have a good many very specific things to raise - could you respond quickly this time, and we can talk through them one by one - starting with that inappropriate campaign box.--Soundofmusicals (talk) 23:50, 14 March 2013 (UTC)


OK - look I was prepared for us to talk about what was wrong with that derivative repetitive and largely unreferenced mess - especially since you had actually reinstated a good deal of the improved article anyway. I was waiting for you to hop back in with a few ideas, and some rational defence of what you had done - this is quite an important article, it really needs..

1. to be about the subject in hand - a lot of what you "added back" is about WWI aviation in general - we COULD I suppose write an article about WWI aviation, highlighting the Fokker Scourge (note spelling) - but that article would not belong here. Much waffling about background isn't necessary in an article like this - it all needs to be specifically relevant. Quite different if you're writing a book (like say "Sharks among the minnows") - although even that has a higher percentage of its text on the specific subject than did your version of the article. Most people know that WWI started in 1914 without us telling them for instance (I should hope). This, and a lot of other things, are pure waffle. Personally - I would have liked to put in the other approaches the German high command was into on the "machine gun in an aeroplane" bit before Garros' crash put the spur behind the "through the propeller" approach. The "C' types were used quite aggressively at first - they were shooting down almost as many allied aircraft as the Fokkers anyway - and spread over a great many more pilots. There was even a pusher "C" type (the AGO C.II) that was held in some awe by the allies (it seems to have been faster than the Fokker, a twin fuselage equivalent of the F.E.2b). Another approach was the use of two engined "large battle planes" - the AEG G.I - then called the K.I - the idea that they could fire in every direction. These really only rate a passing reference though.

2. to be specifically referenced. Most of the points made in THIS version could have had multiple footnotes at almost every turn - after you got off your high horse you actually added a good deal of it back anyway, the point is that this is the real kernel of the article!!

3. To be comprehensive. The term WAS a product of the British press - and it was coined after the Germans had lost their air supremacy, and overall allied air losses were down, German casualties were up, and the French in particular were doing pretty well whatever they liked in the air. Hence the desperate moves by the Germans to copy the Nieuport!! The "politics" of the exaggerated coverage RFC casualties got after they had moderated (and before the much more serious rise in casualties from August/September 1916 or so) onwards is not easy to cover in a npov manner (as we must here). It is quite possible I over-do it a little. None the less it is such an important aspect that it must be mentioned in the lead - and covered more closely in the main text.

4. Without pushing the opposite barrow TOO strongly, it MUST get away from the "schoolboys own paper" idea that even at the height of the scourge British casualties were substantial (they never were - Norman Banks actually lists them in "Sharks and Minnows" !!!) and that they were mainly B.E.2s - the main type shot down by the Fokkers were actually pusher types, and French Morane Ls. The history of the Fokker monoplane's greatest successes, and eventual downfall, are in fact primarily centred about the battle of Verdun. Bank's very fair figures - based primarily on raw German claims, average about 20 kills a month (and this includes French casualties, which were heavier than the British!)- at a time when dozens of missions were already being flown every day, is very light casualties by any standards. The allies (not to mention the Germans themselves) were almost certainly losing more to accidents and ground fire! Hysterical rah rah rah based on German propaganda of the time just won't do.

The months of the ascendency of the early Jastas that was to follow are another matter altogether, of course, but this in another story, and has its own article(s).

Still not saying we can't improve this article together - but not by ditching months of painstaking research and repeated rewriting (the new article was of course written off-line) - including the a good deal of my own "background material" - especially after NOT communicating previously about what you thought was wrong with my view of what you had written - after being given three MONTHS (not days, not weeks) to do so.

I am an old grump - and I quite possibly WAS a little unkind in some of my initial reaction - but the time to object was then! The name of the game is rational communication and frank discussion, not getting the sulks. Anyway - I'm not entirely without hope we can work together constructively to improve the article further. Try doing it point by point from here on though.

regards, and sorry for being so undiplomatic. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 11:26, 16 March 2013 (UTC)

"Fokker Scourge" is a term for the events

This is an encyclopedia, and just describing the events as they happened is what it's all about. But this bare description, especially if it includes a numeration of the light allied casualties (based, in order to be quite fair, on German claims rather than reported losses) at least gives the reader an opportunity to conclude for himself that the TERM "Fokker Scourge" might just be an example of hysterical hyperbole. We can't draw conclusions like this because it would be OR and controversial - but I think we can be forgiven for giving the reader a chance to decide for himself that this might be the case. Talking about the term "Fokker Scourge" as a term in the lead at least leaves the question open. Otherwise we're prejudging that there was a "scourge". --Soundofmusicals (talk) 12:08, 27 February 2013 (UTC)

The problem with covering the term as a term in the lede is that it then misleads the reader into thinking that the article is about the term, rather than about what the term denotes. Another problem is that the term does not "describe" the period in question, it refers to it. I understand what you're trying to convey, but it might be better to simply be explicit about it. — Ƶ§œš¹ [ãːɱ ˈfɹ̠ˤʷɪ̃ə̃nlɪ] 13:20, 27 February 2013 (UTC)
I agree that this is not an easy one, and I respect your argument, but the article IS about the term, in a way - otherwise we'd call it something else. I think to ignore the term (as a term) here would prejudice an impartial reader into supposing we are endorsing what is, as you seem to imply yourself, not a very good description of what it refers to. I don't think we should err on the other side either: for instance by referring to the "so-called 'Fokker scourge'", as one source does - just trying to preserve complete neutrality, even at the expense of a little verbosity. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 21:00, 27 February 2013 (UTC)
The article isn't actually about the term; with your logic, all Wikipedia articles would be about terms, and that muddies an important distinction. There is some coverage of the term as a term in the lede, so perhaps that would be the place to articulate the hyperbolic nature of the term. I can imagine something as simple as "the term was coined to characterize such and such as bla bla bla." — Ƶ§œš¹ [ãːɱ ˈfɹ̠ˤʷɪ̃ə̃nlɪ] 22:00, 27 February 2013 (UTC)
A perusal of WP:LEAD may be helpful here. Most Wikipedia articles are referenced by a clear, reasonably unambiguous term. This one, for the best of reasons, is not. An important function of the lead is to define what the article is about. I think "the term was coined to characterize such and such as bla bla bla" might in this case be a bit TOO explicit - as I remarked in my first post to this thread this IS an encyclopedia article rather than an historical treatise, and we do need to be as neutral as possible. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 23:30, 27 February 2013 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you mean by a "clear, reasonably unambiguous term." If you mean what the term refers to, I can see that there are two possible meanings that are very similar to each other. I'm also not sure what we're being neutral between. — Ƶ§œš¹ [ãːɱ ˈfɹ̠ˤʷɪ̃ə̃nlɪ] 18:36, 2 March 2013 (UTC)
This argument doesn't apply to the vast majority of articles, where our "obvious" title is unambiguous, and descriptive of the topic of the article. If we had the choice we probably wouldn't use "Fokker Scourge" as an article title at all - for instance we could call it the "Fokker Eindecker Period" or something like that. Being stuck with a term that isn't just a bad description, but seems to describe something that didn't really happen - I think it is fair enough to talk about the term as a term in a way that might otherwise be a bit redundant. Neutrality in this case is steering between going all revisionist and saying how the scourge bit (in the context of a particularly bloody war) is less based on physical events and more about what people thought about them, and on the other hand, talking up the events to fit the "scourge" bit. Either might make interesting writing - neither, I feel, would be encyclopedic. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 23:20, 2 March 2013 (UTC)
Ok, the basic format of article ledes is to begin with something to the effect of "'X is __" with the blank being a simple definition. If there is no simple definition, then some hedging is in order. But it seems that fokker scourge has a simple enough definition that hedging is unnecessary in that first, defining sentence. What you seem to be implying is that, because the term itself is not the best term, we should go away from this formula. There's nothing in WP:LEAD that would encourage that rationale and I don't think it's a sufficient reason to do away with it. If you don't feel that there is sufficient backing from sources to unambiguously say "this term is kind of hyperbolic" or "this term was coined to emphasize X or Y" then we shouldn't try to weasel our way into implying it. — Ƶ§œš¹ [ãːɱ ˈfɹ̠ˤʷɪ̃ə̃nlɪ] 16:47, 5 March 2013 (UTC)
How would you put it then? You can see, perhaps, what we lost in your original edit. I am always open to the idea of improving this article - especially its (rather difficult) lead. Certainly we don't want to "weasel" our way round stuff (by no means sure we do) - but on the other hand don't want to imply that we're making an OR type decision that we can only back up indirectly, either. An article like this is very different from what we might say if we were writing a chapter in a book rather than an encyclopedia entry. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 12:25, 6 March 2013 (UTC)
I did a quick Google Books search of "Fokker scourge" to see what sort of wording I'd find, here's the first page of results:
  1. this source (2002) defines it as "the period when the German fighter wreaked havoc on its French and British opponents" and "began with the introduction of the E.I." characterized as the first monoplane with interrupter gear (p. 227).
  2. this source (2001) defines it as the period of superiority of the E1 "over contemporary French and English machines" (p. 131)
  3. this source (2011) defines it as "an onslaught of single-seat monoplanes equipped with mechanical interrupter gear" (p. 7)
  4. this source (2002) defines it as the problem wherein "Allied aircraft...could not cope with the technological advance of the synchronizer-controlled machine gun" (p. 75)
  5. this source (2008) doesn't really do a good job of clarifying what the term means, it's either a period of time (presumably one of air superiority) or the actual plane itself. (p. 39)
  6. this source (2008) defines it as the period of "dominance of the new German Fokker E.I. aircraft" (p. 198)
  7. this source (2000) defines it as the period when "Allied loses soared" presumably due to the E.I. (p. 10)
  8. this source (2006) doesn't have a clear definition either, (a page on the chapter covering it is missing in Google preview) though it does seem to be the period
So it was pretty consistent until I found this source (2003) which characterizes it as an "air-war propaganda campaign...for the purpose of demoralizing the enemy and undermining the opposing public's confidence in its leadership" (p.101-3 ) Also important for our purposes, it has fokker scare as a more modern synonym. So I looked up "Fokker scare":
  • this source (1999) similarly characterizes it as an example of the psychological phenomenon where a new technological surprise of one side is overrated by the other "" (p. )
  • this source (2009) defines it as "the success" of the E.I. due to its technological innovation (p. 88)
A number of these sources (1, 3, 4) don't really have encyclopedic wording, which you've expressed as a priority. Because you had expressed concerns about NPOV, I feel like the 9th and 10th sources might be good to draw from to get wording that reflects a more detached view. Have you encountered the term fokker scare before? — Ƶ§œš¹ [ãːɱ ˈfɹ̠ˤʷɪ̃ə̃nlɪ] 16:54, 22 March 2013 (UTC)

[outdent]

Thanks - that is most incredibly helpful - I'm already starting work on incorporating some of these sources - although I normally like to have at least handled a source in hard copy (I personally own most of those already cited) these are looking excellent. Thanks!!!! --Soundofmusicals (talk) 20:42, 22 March 2013 (UTC)

Glad to help. What do you think about renaming the article to "Fokker Scare"? It's less common, but it's more neutral. — Ƶ§œš¹ [ãːɱ ˈfɹ̠ˤʷɪ̃ə̃nlɪ] 15:44, 24 March 2013 (UTC)
A better description of what actually happened too - but it fails the WP:Commonname test I fear. None the less I have already set up Fokker Scare to refer to this article. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 18:54, 24 March 2013 (UTC)

That lead!!

Another editor has made a very brave attempt at reworking the lead - I appreciate this, as it has probably always been the most shakiest part of this particular article. On the other hand the new lead didn't quite work either (without going into specifics). I have done my own "rework" - addressing a few of the new infelicities, while trying hard to retain the best aspects of the most recent edit - in particular the rearrangement of material, which largely DOES work. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 18:41, 24 March 2013 (UTC)

Peripheral detail

I am open to discussion, but I am very concerned that this article remains succinct and 100% specifically relevant. The trouble with adding more and more detail (however accurate) around the edges is that we might lose that particular quality, and even lose sight of the essential facts in a cloud of waffle. Hence my reverting edits from someone I know to be a very constructive editor with an excellent grasp of the subject matter. Please don't take any of this personally! --Soundofmusicals (talk) 12:04, 24 May 2013 (UTC)

Technology and psychology

The first paragraph of the lead currently reads:"Significant as the technical advantage of the new fighter was, the psychological effect of its unheralded introduction was also a major factor". There are two separate things here - one is the actual technological, or technical, advantage of the new fighter (the Fokker) - the other was the psychological effect - it seriously dented Allied (especially British) morale because it was unexpected. The Germans had been behind in this particular department, and now, suddenly, for the first time since the beginning of the war, they were ahead. This upset people.

Changing this sentence, as someone did, to "The significance of the technical advantage of the new fighter was the psychological effect of its unheralded introduction" - DOES indeed make sense, but not (quite) the sense of the source cited, nor the sense we wished to make. The psychological effect of the new technology was far from the only significance it had, nor, perhaps, even the main significance. Young men were also being killed, to mention just one other "significance".

Now it is quite possible that the sentence concerned could be more felicitously expressed - but its principal significance is not its felicity of expression, but (this being an encyclopedia) its actual meaning. Changing the expression to make it neater and more "logical" is only a "good thing" if it leaves the meaning intact. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 13:45, 26 July 2013 (UTC)

"Lay the bogey" (comment on recent "edit of an edit")

To "lay" a ghost is to exorcise or banish it. This phrase none the less seems to have been originally connected with GOLF (where of course it means to finish a hole one stroke below par), rather than the evident meaning of "to exorcise the evil spirit". A pun, probably. In any case the dictionary glosses our meaning here as "anything annoying". It has several other meanings in air force slang, including "unidentified (or enemy) aircraft". Although it IS sometimes spelled "boogie" - this seems to be from confusion with a similar (but distinct) word with a musical connotation (boogie-woogie). "Lay the boogie" gives lots of Google hits, but these are mostly connected with a song title - which was probably originally a similar, if less exact pun to the golf one. But I agree that "laid to rest" is clearer, given the phrase itself seems no longer to be current, and has lost its instant recognition. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 00:50, 20 May 2014 (UTC)

Parabellum vs "Spandau"

The following is a detailed explanation for my reversion of a well intentioned edit from a knowledgeable editor.

The first few Fokker Eindeckers were armed with Parabellum machine guns - but much more to the point they were fitted with the first (unsatisfactory) version of the Fokker synchronization gear. Probably not our place really to "lead the historical consensus" and state that it was the unreliable gear (the production gear, while still liable to failure, was much more reliable) that caused problems for some of the early Fokker pilots - this seems much more likely than the idea that it was the Parabellum gun itself (being essentially a lightened Maxim the Parabellum should have made a fine synchronized gun). All our sources, not to mention our other articles touching on this subject, are agreed that the reason for the adoption of the "Spandau" rather than the Parabellum as the standard "pilot's gun" was essentially one of availability - the Parabellums were all needed as observer's weapons. In any case, this level of detail is not really necessary at this point - the information is essentially peripheral. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 08:35, 14 June 2014 (UTC)

That first defining sentence!

An editor has suggested the following as an "improvement on the current one.

The Fokker Scourge, also sometimes called the Fokker Scare, was the period during World War I in which the Imperial German Fliegertruppen held air superiority on the Western Front as a result of the superior Fokker Eindecker aircraft. The Fokker Eindeckers, a monoplane fighter, were also equipped with synchronised machine-guns that could fire through its propeller without causing damage, making it superior to the Allied aircraft then in service.

I am in two minds about "during the First world War" or words to that effect. I think this only really belongs in this sentence if we feel that the typical reader of the article will have doubts. But... And I think that "exerted an ascendency", while neat (and incidentally totally "grammatical") smacks a little of the style of our source?

Especially for the "uninitiated" - several misleading statements are added, however.

  • The Fokker Eindecker was a pretty straight copy of a pre-war French sporting aircraft. Without going into particulars it was not in itself "superior" to anything very much, except that (when it worked) the synchronisation gear enabled a tractor aircraft to fire forwards. In particular, the implication that part of its superiority was that it was a monoplane is even more misleading, since it was quite quickly found necessary to replace it with (superior) biplanes. A reader who actually WANTS this level of detail can either read the article, or even just click on the Eindecker link. Pre-1913 monoplanes had several fundamental aerodynamic and structural drawbacks - as the "monoplane" article makes clear.
  • The "definition" of a synchronised armament incorporated into the "lead sentence" is also misleading. Propellers were in fact very frequently damaged by synchronisation gears, especially the very far from reliable early version of the Fokker gear. The Eagle of Lille himself managed to shoot his own aircraft down at least twice by "damaging his propeller". Even if it didn't always work, it was of course a revolutionary piece of equipment, but we already said that. A full definition of what we mean by gun synchronisation in this context can be best got by clicking on the link.
  • "Air Superiority" is a term that has quite a precise definition. There is a whole article to follow to ascertain to what degree the "scourge", in retrospect, really constituted air superiority in the modern sense. Although, as I said, I don't much like "exerted an ascendency" myself. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 21:46, 10 September 2014 (UTC)

CE

Tidied page, added a few wikilinks and found an infobox to suit.Keith-264 (talk) 10:33, 12 April 2015 (UTC)

Only just noticed that the spell checker has interrupter not -or....Ahem!Keith-264 (talk) 06:18, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
Structure: do we need citations in the lead? Is there a preference for <> cites or sfn's (I'll alter to suit)? Keith-264 (talk) 06:18, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
The original "reference/citation structure" is a widely used one ("<> and no templates" - all page numbers noted where appropriate - all "repeated" references named) - I would stick with this and bring all references/citations into line. This would be a fairly small job, in fact if no one else will I will do it myself. ALTHOUGH if you have a definite preference for something else AND it produces something close to standard academic referencing, AND you are prepared to do the extra work involved then go for your life! Even if all the bibliographic details go into those horrid templates. The only thing I am really and truly against is inconsistency, I just want us to have all the references done the same way.
As for references in the lead - the ones that are there were inserted when someone from the military history unit insisted they were needed and that the article needed them to get off the "start" level it was on at the time. By all means cut them out - provided of course than the points concerned are repeated (and duly cited/referenced!!!) in the body of the article.
There is nothing that says we HAVE to have an infobox(!) The first version of this article actually had a battle/campaign one that REALLY didn't fit - I'm by no means sure that the current one really does either - although I may be open to persuasion. Just explain what an infobox adds here, and IF it does why we need this particlar one. Otherwise I would rather it went. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 06:50, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
I'll change the sfns to the original form (I like the templates). Having read some of the talk comments, I was surprised that there's a difference of opinion over the infobox, I thought that they were standard. Since the lead is supposed to reflect the article there shouldn't be anything in it that isn't cited in the body but I'll need to check first. RegardsKeith-264 (talk) 07:16, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
Done the refs, not too sure about the untemplated bibliographical details though. Sadly I have to stop now and go to work.Keith-264 (talk) 07:36, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
Just got an edit conflict on the same paragraph, sorry about that.Keith-264 (talk) 11:14, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
Admire your energy and dedication! I will "fix" the refs if you don't have time and are not sure how to apply the templates to all the "untemplated" citations. I think we are probably agreed that the important thing is that everything there is only one method used throughout the article - you're welcome to "your" way IF you can make it work! The infobox really HAS to go - on looking at it a bit closer than I had, it is quite wrong - appropriate for an article ABOUT the Fokker Eindecker fighters, it is definitely not meant to head every article in which said fighters play a role. Infoboxes are "standard" if you like, but certainly not obligatory, and we don't have them for articles where the tabulated information they provide is NOT a genuinely useful introduction/summary to the article. I am rewriting the lead, looks like being identical to neither your latest version, nor my last one either. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 11:27, 14 April 2015 (UTC)
I changed the sfn's to <> as it was quicker and altered the book details to the un-templated style. I prefer to keep the infobox since the details about the Eindeckers is germane to the effect they had.Keith-264 (talk) 11:35, 14 April 2015 (UTC)

New (15/04/2015) lead

This remains open to discussion, of course, but I would appreciate if we could discuss any further changes here before jumping in!

1. I have cut the infobox.

OKKeith-264 (talk) 05:55, 15 April 2015 (UTC)

The "weapon" infobox is not appropriate - as the Fokker Scourge is a phase of the air war on the Western Front rather than a "weapon" - the Fokker Eindecker is also not a "weapon" in the sense covered by the standard weapon infobox - in fact aircraft types have their own standard infobox. I initially used the weapon infobox for my rewrite of the Synchronization gear - and got told very promptly (by the Military History people) that a synchronization gear isn't a weapon either, even though it controls weapons and might be part of a weapons system, and I can see their point. As I have mentioned, not all articles have an appropriate infobox. If this had one, it would be the "military conflict" infobox - but strictly there is no such thing as a military conflict called the Fokker Scourge either - it rather describes a period of rapid technical change that stretched for several months, and includes an aspect of the Battle of Verdun - but one couldn't call it "part" of Verdun without eliminating the British part in it altogether. The Bloody April article DOES get away with using the military conflict infobox as it describes the air component of the Battle of Arras.

2. Initial defining paragraph.

This is just the latest in quite a series of attempts to get this right. I have tired to keep it clear and succinct, even to someone not familiar with either aviation or military history, by putting peripheral matter (like designations for the German airforce itself, as well as its fighter units) into footnotes, where they don't interrupt the flow. Still not 100% satisfied, especially with that first sentence, but it reads fairly clearly to me.

A term with a link seems to me to cater for a person who knows nothing and someone who knows something but if you want to relegate this to footnotes, ok but I prefer footnotes at the end of the sentence after a citation (if there is one for that bit).Keith-264 (talk) 05:55, 15 April 2015 (UTC)

3. "Withdrawal" vs "disappear".

The latter is better, as the Eindeckers were less "withdrawn" than just simply run out. Some pilots actually preferred them (!) and kept theirs so long as they were flyable. No new ones had been sent to the Keks (or the Jastas that were arising from them) for some time when Wintgens was killed in his EIV on the 25th of September 1916. If (as seems likely) his was (just about) the last in active service then that can be conveniently taken as the end of the "Eindecker Period". Certainly by that time the eindecker was an anachronism rather than just obsolete!

4. I have reverted a few other fairly immaterial wording changes on rather similar grounds, where my original wording is actually better.

That's a rather one-sided definition of better.Keith-264 (talk) 05:55, 15 April 2015 (UTC)

5. I have left the cites in place for the moment - I think it is probably good to have them there, unless it is actually against the MOS or something - since there is rather more matter that will be controversial to some people than in the leads to most articles.

I'd like at least a tentative "for the moment" agreement to this from everyone - so we can get on with the rest of the article, section by section.--Soundofmusicals (talk) 20:19, 14 April 2015 (UTC)

until the retirement of the last Eindeckers from the early German fighter units [Note 2] in September 1916.[1]

They didn't "disappear"....Keith-264 (talk) 20:55, 14 April 2015 (UTC)

Well, perhaps not like a person or object in a fantasy yarn or fairy story that disappeared when the magician waved their wand - but "withdraw" or "retire" isn't really what happened either - the last one at the front was probably Wintgens' E.IV and it was shot down - there were actually never that many of them anyway and the few left at the end seem to have been either destroyed in combat or accidents, or written off as not worth repair or maintenance. From the records they were there and then they weren't. How about "faded away", or "departed"? Not a big deal really - but "withdrawal" or "retirement" seems to suggest an orderly upgrade program. Right to the end of the war the Deutsche Luftstreitkräfte were chronically short of aeroplanes, especially fighters, and obsolete types tended to get "used up" - for example the Albatros D.Va was still in front line service up to the last days of the war, long after they were quite obsolete - there just weren't enough newer fighters to fill all the gaps. Look, it really doesn't matter that much, and we do need to get on to the next section - just pick whatever word you're happiest with and lets get on with it. I'm probably just being a fusspot. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 00:43, 15 April 2015 (UTC)
If "withdrawal" or "retirement" smack too much of organisation and intent, how about "gradually diminished by losses, accidents and mechanical failure."?Keith-264 (talk) 05:55, 15 April 2015 (UTC)
I've tried another form of words and moved the notes to the ends of sentences. Satisfactory?Keith-264 (talk) 06:01, 15 April 2015 (UTC)
1. I've refined (in my mind at least) our basic object in this lead - splitting the first sentence, and removing the footnoted information altogether! As I said in the edit summary, the footnoted information is interesting, true, and cited - but it does not really help the kind of reader who needs to be told what the Fokker Scourge is! If we decide either question (the name of the German Flying Corps/Air force, and designation and nature of the Gereman fighter units at this period) matters, there will be better places to insert it later in the article. This cuts the Gordian Knot and leaves the lead clearer.
I think that's a rather cavalier way of going about things. We shouldn't infer the nature of the people who read articles. Notice also the class criteria - they refer to all kinds of reader. I think that the notes were a reasonable compromise but removing them is unreasonable and I'd like them put back.Keith-264 (talk) 11:12, 16 April 2015 (UTC)
2. I've split the first sentence of our defining statement. We now state what the Fokker Scourge actually IS (the name for an historical period or phase of the broader history of WWI aviation in general and air superiority during the period in particular) - and THEN go on to details like what happened and when. Which (this being the lead) we keep clear, concise, and specifically relevant. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 07:56, 16 April 2015 (UTC)
There are two stories being told, the effect of the Eindeckers and the separate controversy in Britain so I think we should make this clear in the lead and keep them separate in the main text, which they (mostly) are. Keith-264 (talk) 11:12, 16 April 2015 (UTC)
Please don't "interleaf" remarks, among other things they can easily get "lost" - keeping everything chronological makes for a clearer discussion, especially remembering that other people may very well want to butt in (and maybe with helpful remarks, too!)
The reason I cut the notes is not because they were in note form (my own suggestion, after all) - or your moving them to the end of sentences (which worked well in one case and very badly in the other) - but the fact that I realised, on reflection, they enshrined incidental detail that (if it matters) belongs in the article and not in the lead. There is no need in the course of defining what the Fokker Scourge actually was to go into detail about the Germans being in process of a major renamimg/reorganisation of their airforce, and especially their fighter units. In fact I plan to mention both these things in a more appropriate context, in my re-written version of our "Background" section (working on it!!). --Soundofmusicals (talk) 11:59, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
Incidentally - quite take your point about the "two stories" - the "political" one has, as always, its own paragraph in this lead. What I was talking about in my splitting of the first sentence was just that - same information but without the convolutinous (if that's not a word it should be) sentence structure that often arises from trying to say too much all at once. As for "types of reader" - I was just referring to enthusiasts that already know most of what we are telling them, and others, for whom the subject matter is perhaps totally new. The lead section of any article fails if we unduly confuse people in the latter class - especially as all of us are in that class for many articles. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 12:13, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
All footnotes should be at the end of sentences. I feel that this is a dialogue with the deaf, so I will watch your edits and intervene when I think you make unwarranted ones.Keith-264 (talk) 12:05, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
Footnotes in the middle of sentences look untidy, and I agree they are better at the end where the meaning permits, but if they are there to clarify a word in the middle of a sentence? Never mind, in such a case we probably shouldn't have a footnote anyway. But as I have already said (twice) that is not why the footnotes went. Just that right in the middle of describing what the Fokker Scourge is, is not the best place to mention the information about the re-naming/reorganisation of the German air services at this juncture. It's not irrelevant - just doesn't belong at this point. Don't worry, it is not forgotten, and will be there when we get to it. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 12:26, 18 April 2015 (UTC)

clarification needed

"After about ten minutes of manoeuvring (giving the lie to exaggerated accounts of the stability of B.E.2 aircraft),"

Can someone clarify in the article what is meant by this. Did the encounter not last ten minutes?

I think this is an old one - I have always read it as the fight put up by the B.E. being quite creditable in the circumstances, that it obviously manoeuvred well enough to last for a ten minute dog fight against an aircraft that was so much better armed - proving that accounts of the stability of the B.E. are exaggerated. On the other hand I tend to agree this is a bit cryptic. perhaps even non-encyclopedic? We're working from the top down at the moment so perhaps when we get to it? --Soundofmusicals (talk) 23:55, 14 April 2015 (UTC)

Subsequent operations

This little potted history of the remainder of the (fighter vs fighter) war is necessarily quite brief and general - doesn't need to be a great deal more detailed - this article is about the Fokker Scourge itself - certainly not the place for a detailed analysis of Bloody April, which has its own article anyway. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 06:53, 2 May 2016 (UTC)

There's no detail, it's a generality.Keith-264 (talk) 07:27, 2 May 2016 (UTC)
I've modified it and wonder if you can quantify the increase in RFC losses? More is incontestably true but many is tendentious, as the statistics of the Fokker Scourge in the article above show. Regards Keith-264 (talk) 07:36, 2 May 2016 (UTC)
It's talking abut Bloody April. where "many" is nothing more than the unvarnished. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 09:15, 2 May 2016 (UTC)

Very latest new lead paragraph (17-3-17)

Yet another attempt! While (I hope) preserving the best of the latest edits I have cut some "over-linking", rearranged a sentence or two that seemed to mean something it didn't - deleted stuff about the date that was better covered in the following paragraph anyway etc. Hopefully this version is at least as good as any of the previous versions? --Soundofmusicals (talk) 02:27, 17 March 2017 (UTC)

Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/Content guide [1]

The opening paragraph (or lead section in a longer article) should concisely convey:

  • The name of the battle (including alternate names).
  • When did it happen?
  • Where did it happen?
  • Which war or campaign does it belong to?
  • Who were the combatants?
  • What was its outcome or significance?

This

The Fokker Scourge (the Fokker Scare) name was a term used to describe a period from the summer of 1915 to the spring of 1916,when during the war in the air over the Western Front where in the First World War.which German Fokker Eindecker monoplane fighter aircraft carrying synchronised machine-guns of the Imperial German Fliegertruppen des deutschen Kaiserreiches (Die Fliegertruppe, Imperial German Flying Corps) had a tactical advantage over poorly armed Allied aircraft and obtained a measure of air superiority. who (needs a mention of the RFC and AM[1] Significant as the technical advantage of the new fighter was, the psychological effect of its unheralded introduction was also a major factor. significance[2]

is better than

The Fokker Scourge (also sometimes called the Fokker Scare) was a term used to describe the period[assumes knowledge] during the war in the air over the Western Front in the First World War when the [new] Fokker Eindecker monoplane[relevance to a forward-firing machine-gun?] fighter aircraft[aircraft when was the term fighter first used?] of the Imperial German Flying Corps, armed with synchronised machine-guns, held a tactical advantage over poorly armed[vague] Allied aircraft[vague s/be RFC and AM in blue] and obtained a measure of air superiority.[1] Significant as the technical advantage of the new fighter was, the psychological effect of its unheralded introduction was also a major factor.[sloppy prose/a major factor of what?][2]

References

  1. ^ a b Franks 2001, p. 1.
  2. ^ a b Kennett 1991, p. 110.

that.Keith-264 (talk) 08:09, 17 March 2017 (UTC)

Agree in principle - we've tried for far too long to cover every possible base here, and the end version (my latest) remains a tortured mess - what about slicing the Gordian knot and making the wording of this lead, especially the first paragraph, just as succinct and compact as we possibly can? "When" is actually complicated - at least two definitions really, depending - best kept to next paragraph and given the full treatment - and do we even need to have the "war in the air over the Western Front" in this sentence - pretty obvious we're talking about WWI aeroplanes, when all's said and done - and if there is any doubt it is not going to be "fixed" by multilayered attempts as prescient coverage of bases. "Monoplane" is not relevant to anything in this context. This lead paragraph can be (and in view of the length of the article SHOULD be, according to the guidelines, treated as a whole, so that there is (really) no need to overload the first sentence into incomprehensibility. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 05:01, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
The recommendation for the lead is up to four paragraphs so your use of succinct-ness as a criterion is insufficient. Your versions fail to follow
  • The name of the battle (including alternate names).
  • When did it happen?
  • Where did it happen?
  • Which war or campaign does it belong to?
  • Who were the combatants?
  • What was its outcome or significance?

which makes it inadequate. Perhaps the first sentence should convey what and where? Keith-264 (talk) 09:38, 20 March 2017 (UTC)

I tried more sentences and fewer words to meet the criteria and your reservations. I think FFA needs linking as it is an abbreviation and usually the full title is given followed by the abbreviation in brackets. Keith-264 (talk) 11:41, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
  • When did it happen? (Indeed, DID it "happen" in the usual sense?) the "when" here is very highly problematic indeed. This NEEDS absolutely the full treatment it gets in the second sentence. The initial "Summer 1915" bit is so positively and comprehensively taken apart and exploded in the second paragraph that we can only say it is totally misleading. Why not just leave it out? Sure we need the lead to say "when" but not necessarily in a particular order. What wrong with waiting the "when" until we have enough of the "what" in place for it to make sense.
  • What are we talking about anyway? Was it primarily an integral part of a single ground battle (no - although it influenced the course of several of them and was an important part of at least two). Was it fought on (or above) the Western Front - or mainly in the British House of Commons? Was it even really a piece of media generated "false news". A bit of all three? The lead we had before this latest tinker said it was "a phase of the contest for air superiority on the Western Front during the First World War". Redefining the "battle" as one that ran concurrently over the whole war (a unitary struggle for air superiority) - and picking the FS out as a phase of it - might be only one of a number of ways we could think about it, and it may not even be "the best" one, but it is at least coherent and internally consistent.
Might leave this with you for the moment, as I DO have other stuff I'd dearly love to be getting on with (not just on WP either) - but try to get the "faithful serving men" formula under control. They actually need regimenting in accordance with the case in point. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 18:44, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
I don't know what you mean but it seems offensive.Keith-264 (talk) 19:53, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
I do know that July and August are summer months.Keith-264 (talk) 19:56, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
I did want a rest from this!! Actually I was misquoting Kipling, it is "honest" rather than "faithful":
I keep six honest serving-men
(They taught me all I knew);
Their names are What and Why and When
And How and Where and Who.


Point is - in framing a Wikipedia lead (and many other contexts) they are "serving men" not masters.
As for the "When" - we can't say when something happened outside the context of what it was that happened anyway. In any case they are not summer where I am!! --Soundofmusicals (talk) 20:28, 20 March 2017 (UTC)

Nephelokokkygia? Keith-264 (talk) 21:00, 20 March 2017 (UTC)

No, Tasmania (same place perhaps?). Being southern hemisphere our seasons are upside down! - Sounds silly, but I had a major "conflict" once with someone who had a crusade against using season names as "substitutes for dates" - look, this is getting to be far too much fun - I had better cut the wit and talk in "words of one syllable" or we'll never get beyond exchanging witticisms.
1. I agree that the "serving men" checklist is useful to ensure we don't forget anything important - the actual order in which they are presented in order to make a coherent description, on the other hand, is not a formula. Giving Mr. When a single crack at things, especially when what he has to say is unusually intricate and muddled, does make sense.
2. "Monoplane" may be meaningless but funnily enough "eindecker" isn't! The first of the Fokker Fighters was not the E.I but the M.5K/MG. A detail, but that is the reason we preferred to use the general term.
3. All the other things I already said!
What about THIS for goodness sake! --Soundofmusicals (talk) 22:19, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
I thought you were English! ;o)Keith-264 (talk) 22:30, 20 March 2017 (UTC)
Very sad you have not seen fit to answer any of the above - but flat reverted a thoughtful modification of this sentence. For the record I am most unhappy with the state you have left this lead in, but I really can't be stuffed edit warring with a totally unresponsive "opponent" over it. A shame to have an article I put some much work into spoiled like this, but I suppose it can't be helped. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 11:57, 21 March 2017 (UTC)

I don't know why you've jumped to such negative conclusions but all of your comments seem to begin with a complaint. I was quite happy to continue discussing the wording of the lead but really don't like your protestations of ignorance of plain English followed by a revert. Had you been a little more patient and taken note of the times zones we're in, I would have had the chance to address your comments but now I'm so fed up with your disingenuous edit labels and peremptory edits that I'm struggling to AGF.

  • What have you failed to understand about the word, supposedly?Keith-264 (talk) 13:08, 21 March 2017 (UTC)
Precisely what I clearly said - I don't understand its context in that sentence! Like who is doing the supposing, and why when and how are they doing it? But this is nor getting us anywhere - just READ the following (pretty please)...
It might be at least partly me - or perhaps I've just been trying too hard? In any case from here I might as well have been talking to a brick wall. All the response I can get to a full explanation of where I am coming from on this one is a reference to Cloudcuckooland and mistaking me for an English person. I took this as good-humoured agreement rather than a counter argument and got on with my efforts to change the first paragraph to what I assumed we had more or less agreed to – which you simply reverted, without further comment. Nonetheless (sighs) - one last attempt before I take this off my watchlist and leave you to it! Let's try one point at a time - please comment on each one, even if it’s just to say "that's rubbish"! As I see it...
1. This page does not really describe an event. (Like say, the battle of Trafalgar, or even the battle of Verdun and the Somme.) In so far as it is a "battle" at all, it is a phase in an extended subsidiary campaign, nothing less than one "swing" of the see-saw contest for air superiority during WWI. Even this is very hard to pin down to a particular day – did "the scourge" start when the first Fokker (strictly NOT an EI by the way) arrived and end when the last one left, or can we pin it down to the period when their successes started, and end it when those successes had (largely) dwindled away? And it has, and I think this is not only clearly borne out in the sources – but something that has never been in dispute here, a strong psychological factor – even at the time people like Cecil Lewis were wondering quite what all the fuss had been about. There was also a parliamentary campaign connected with it. Now all these things had different time frames – the detail currently contained in the second paragraph is (I think) in itself a reasonably successful attempt to cover this, to describe when in fact. We can hardly cover the case with less, anyway. I think, and I have said this now several times, that we are better off keeping the when to one place, other than a VERY general when in the form of mentioning which war we’re talking about. Now I may very well be quite wrong here, but if so you have so far not mentioned the fact - much less why (or even what, wherefore, why, how etc.) or presented a counter case for a split when. Perhaps we need an opening paragraph that concentrates on the when - and leaves the other "serving men" to the second paragraph?
Before we go any further, could you please just explain why we need those dates (with or without a qualifying “supposedly” in the first paragraph. Referring in the course of your argument to what I have just said above (not to mention before that and before THAT) would be helpful. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 23:47, 21 March 2017 (UTC)
There are two things, a development in the air war which can be given a time and a political campaign by Pemberton-Billing et al. which used it with ulterior motives. The term was coined by the campaigners to push their claim for more orders for aircraft against the RAFactory. Supposedly leads on to the section in the lead that adverts to the second thing. On reflection, it might be better to start with the Pemberton-Billing matter and then go on to describe the arrival of the Fokkers. Trying to refer to two things only loosely related, is why there's so much difficulty in coming to agreement. It's midnight here so I'm off to bed. Regards Keith-264 (talk) 23:57, 21 March 2017 (UTC)

For your delectation when you return: This is the first paragraph, broken down into "serving man" type elements.


Name 1. The Fokker Scourge (also sometimes called the Fokker Scare) What 2. was a phase in the contest for air superiority where 3. over the Western Front When1 4. during the First World War.

Who1 1. The Imperial German Flying Corps Did What1 2. obtained a degree of ascendency Who2 3. against obsolete Allied aircraft. Why1 4. with the introduction of the Fokker Eindecker (family of) fighters.

Remark1 1. Significant as the technical advantage of the new fighters was, Why2 2. especially their synchronised machine-guns Remark2 3. the psychological effect of their unheralded introduction was also a major factor.

The principal when bit is of course para 2 (more or less as is).

If we could discuss the wording of each element - and its precise placement in the whole?

I deliberately have NOT put this into the article until we have been through it. --Soundofmusicals (talk) 01:27, 22 March 2017 (UTC)