HiTech have you seen this?
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-468/contents.htmIt has this table:
Aircraft.....................
......Engine......... ...................(L/D)max
Fokker E-III.....................Oberursel U.I..........................
.6.4
DeHavilland DH-2.........Gnome Monosoupape..................
....7.0
Nieuport 17....................Le Rhone 9J...........................
...7.9
Albatross D-III................Mercedes DII..........................
..7.5
Fokker triplane, Dr.-1.......Oberursel Ur II...........................
8.0
Sopwith F.1 Camel.............Clerget 9B...........................
...7.7
SPAD XIII C.1...............Hispano-Suiza 8Ba........................7.
4
Fokker D-VII.....................BMW IIIA.........................
.......8.1
Sopwith 5F.1 Dolphin.......Hispano-Suiza............................9.2
Fokker D-VIII.................Oberursel Ur II...........................
.8.1
Junkers D-I.......................BMW IIIA.........................
.......7.0
Handley Page 0/400..........Liberty 12.N.........................
.....9.7
Gotha G.V......................Merc
edes DIVa.........................
..7.7
Caproni CA.42.....................Lib
erty................. ................8.2
B.E. 2c...........................
...R.A.F.la.......... ......................8.2
Junkers J-I........................Benz Bz.IV........................
....10.3
DeHavilland DH-4..................Liberty........................ ........8.1
And it also mentions the streamlined wires on the Camel.
"... streamline wires were used for bracing on both the Camel and the Dolphin. (Streamline wires have a cross-sectional shape much like a symmetrical airfoil section.) Such wires were developed by the Royal Aircraft [29] Factory at Farnborough, England and were first flown experimentally on the SE-4 in 1914 (ref. 39). The Sopwith Pup and triplane, both of which entered service in 1916, also had streamline bracing wires. The advantage in drag reduction of using this type of wire rather than the usual round wire is great; there is a factor of about 10 between the drag coefficients of the two types of wire"