Although the presence of two wings (or three in a triplane[?]) adds lift in comparison with a monoplane, a tailplane is as necessary as in a biplane design. Both the main wings can support flaps or [aileron|ailerons] to assist directional and speed control.
Biplanes were most successful in the early days of aviation when the wing sections used were very thin and consequently the wing structure needed to be strengthened by external bracing wires. The biplane configuration allowed the two wings to be braced against one another, increasing the structural strength. Another advantage was the more compact layout with a shorter wing span, which led to greater manoeuverability. The big disadvantage of the biplane layout was that the two wings interfered with one another aerodynamically, each reducing the lift produced by the other. This meant that for a given wing area the biplane produced more drag and less lift than a monoplane. Once thicker wing sections and improved structural materials were introduced, removing the need for external bracing, monoplanes quickly superseded biplanes and the latter now exist only in specialist niche roles.
A variation on the biplane was the sesquiplane, where the (usually) lower wing was significantly smaller than the other, either in span, chord, or both. On occasion, the lower wing was only large enough to support the bracing struts for the upper wing. The name means one-and-a-half wings.
Famous biplanes include the Avro Tutor, Beechcraft Staggerwing, Boeing Stearman, Bristol Bulldog, de Havilland Tiger Moth, Fairey[?] Swordfish, Hawker[?] Hart and Pitts[?] Special. The Stearman is particularly associated with stunt flying with wing-walkers. Famous triplanes include those built by Sopwith[?] and Fokker during World War One. Famous sesquiplanes include the Nieuport[?] 17 and Albatros D.V.
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