In the end, the aircraft of the Austro-Hungarian Army were not defeated by superior technology, but by hunger, fuel starvation, and the disintegration of the empire they were built to defend. They remain today a fascinating "what if" of aviation history—magnificent machines that flew a losing war with desperate courage.
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The Phönix , Aviatik , and UFAG designs did not die in 1918. The Berg D.I directly influenced post-war Swedish and Czechoslovak fighters. The Phönix D.III served briefly with the Royal Yugoslav Air Force.