Albatros designers Robert Thelen, Schubert and Gnädig produced the D.II in response to pilot complaints about poor upward vision in the
Albatros D.I. The solution was to reposition the upper wing 36 cm (14 in) closer to the
fuselage and stagger it forward slightly. Rearrangement of the cabane struts also improved forward view. The D.II otherwise retained the same fuselage, engine installation and armament as the D.I. Basic performance was unchanged. The
Idflieg (
Inspektion der Fliegertruppen - Inspectorate of Flying Troops), ordered an initial batch of 100 D.II aircraft in August 1916. In November 1916,
Idflieg banned Windhoff "ear"
radiators in operational aircraft because they were at a lower level than the crankcase of the engine they were cooling, and a shot into either radiator was likely to drain the cooling system. Late production D.IIs switched to using a
Teves und Braun "airfoil shape" radiator in the centre section of the upper wing. This also proved to be problematic as a leaking or battle damaged radiator could scald the pilot's face. On later Albatros fighters (late models of the
D.III, and the
D.V) the radiator was moved to the right of the centre section to alleviate this problem.
Oeffag (Oesterreichische Flugzeugfabrik AG) also built the D.II under license, as the
Albatros D.II (Oef) /
Oeffag Va.53 /
Oeffag series 53, for the
Luftfahrtruppen. The 16 Austro-Hungarian machines used a Austro-Daimler engine, and were fitted with a Teves und Braun-style wing mounted radiator. ==Operational history==