Ansaldo A.300

A.300
Role Reconnaissance aircraft
Manufacturer Gio. Ansaldo & C.
First flight 1919
Number built ~850


The Ansaldo A.300 was an Italian general-purpose biplane aircraft built by the Ansaldo company (now part of FIAT) of Turin from 1920 to 1929. It also served as a light bomber, transport, fighter and reconnaissance aircraft, and finally as an advanced trainer, with examples in service as late as 1940. 50 examples were also license-built in Poland at ZM E. Plage & T. Laśkiewicz, but were not a success due to poor quality.

Development

Based on Ansaldo's highly successful World War I Balilla and S.V.A scouts, the A.300 was a conventional single-engined two-bay open cockpit biplane of mixed metal and wood-and-fabric construction, powered usually by a water-cooled Fiat A.12bis V12 engine. Most variants had two fixed Vickers guns and one mobile gun mounted in the rear cockpit. It first flew in 1919.

Early examples were two seaters, but the A.300/3 was a three-seater intended for reconnaissance use, of which around 90 were delivered. The most significant variant was the A.300/4, again mostly three-seaters, which started full production in 1923, just as Ansaldo was absorbed into FIAT. This became the standard multi-role aircraft in the newly formed Regia Aeronautica and served in Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, Corfu, Libya and Eritrea.

Operational history

The A.300 was one of the most numerous aircraft of its time, with the production run of the A.300/4 alone, at 700 units, exceeding the total production of any other type of the 1920s except the Breguet XIX and Potez 25. Despite this, and possibly because it was Italian rather than French or British, it remains one of the least documented contemporary types, certainly the most obscure produced in anything like these numbers.

Variants

A.300/2
initial production version
A.300/3
three-seat version, also exported to Spain, Belgium, and Poland
A.300/4
definitive production version with improved cooling
A.300/5
prototype with Lorraine engine
A.300/6
improved A.300/4, also in service
A.300C
prototype airliner
A.300T
prototype civilian version [1]
A.400
prototype

Operators

 Belgium
 Kingdom of Italy
 Soviet Union
 Turkey

Specifications (A.300/4)

General characteristics

Performance

Armament


Notes

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ansaldo aircraft.
  • Taylor, John W. R. (1969). Combat Aircraft of the World: from 1909 to the present. NY, NY: Parragon Books. 
  • Taylor, Michael J. H. (1989). Jane's Encyclopedia of Aviation. London: Studio Editions. 
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