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The Caproni Ca.3 is an Italian heavy bomber of World War I and the postwar era. It was the most produced version of the series of aircraft that began with the 1914 Caproni Ca.1 and continued until the more powerful 1917 Caproni Ca.5 variant.

Ca.3
Caproni Ca.36 at the National Museum of the United States Air Force
Role Heavy bomber
National origin Italy
Manufacturer Caproni
First flight 1916
Primary users Regia Aeronautica
Corpo Aeronautico Militare

Development


Caproni Ca.33, c. 1920s
Caproni Ca.33, c. 1920s

The development of the Ca.1 to the Ca.2 suggested the benefits of increasing amounts of power to the very sound airframe. The Ca.3 was a development of Ca.2, by replacing the two engines mounted on the booms with the same Isotta-Fraschini engine that had been used as the central, pusher engine on that design. The prototype flew in late 1916 and was soon put into production. Known by Caproni at the time as the Caproni 450 hp, the Italian Army designated it the Ca.3. In Caproni's postwar renaming, it became the Ca.33. Between 250 and 300 of these aircraft were built, supplying the Italian Army and Navy (the latter using the type as a torpedo bomber), and the French Army. Late in the war, Robert Esnault-Pelterie licence-built an additional 83 (some sources say only 19) aircraft in France.

Note: there is some variation in published sources over early Caproni names. The confusion stems, in part, from three schemes used to label the aircraft – Caproni's in-house designations of the time, those used by the Italian Army and names created after the war by Caproni for past designs.[citation needed]


Design


The Ca.3 was a three-engined biplane of wooden construction, with a fabric-covered frame. The crew of four were placed in an open central nacelle (front gunner, two pilots and rear gunner-mechanic). The rear gunner manned upper machine guns, standing upon the central engine in a protective "cage" in front of a propeller. The fixed conventional undercarriage had double mainwheels under each engine and a tailskid under the extreme tail of each boom. A substantial double nosewheel prevented damaging and dangerous noseovers.

Armament consisted of two to four Revelli 6.5 mm or 7.7 mm machine guns, one in a front ring mount and one, two or sometimes even three in an upper ring mount. Bombs were suspended under the hull.


Operational history


Nose of the Caproni Ca.33 at Vojenské Historické Múzeum, Piešťany, Slovakia, 2007
Nose of the Caproni Ca.33 at Vojenské Historické Múzeum, Piešťany, Slovakia, 2007

The Ca.1 entered service with the Italian Army in the middle of 1915 and first saw action on 20 August, attacking the Austrian air base at Aisovizza. Fifteen bomber squadrons (1°–15° Squadriglia) were eventually equipped with Ca.1, Ca.2 and Ca.3 bombers, mostly bombing targets in Austro-Hungary. The 12° Squadriglie operated in Libya. In 1918, the 3°, 14° and 15° Squadriglia operated in France.

Apart from the Italian Army, original and licence-built examples were used by France (original Capronis were used in French CAP escadres, licence-built examples in CEP escadres). They were also used by the American Expeditionary Force. There has been some confusion regarding the use of the Ca3 by the British Royal Naval Air Service. The RNAS received six of the larger triplane Ca4s and did not operate the Ca3.[1] The British Ca4s were not used operationally and were returned to Italy after the war. Some of the Ca.36Ms supplied after the war were still in service long enough to see action in Benito Mussolini's first assaults on North Africa.


Variants


All of the following names were applied after the war. At the time, all were known as the 300 hp by Caproni and the Ca.3 by the Army.


Operators


 Argentina

 Kingdom of Italy

 France

 USA


Surviving aircraft and replicas



Italy


Ca.36 at the Italian Air Force Museum
Ca.36 at the Italian Air Force Museum

Slovakia


Replica Caproni Ca.33 at M. R. Štefánik Airport in Bratislava
Replica Caproni Ca.33 at M. R. Štefánik Airport in Bratislava

United States


Caproni Ca.36 at the USAF Museum
Caproni Ca.36 at the USAF Museum

Specifications (Ca.36)


Data from [citation needed]

General characteristics

Performance

Armament
2 × 6.5 mm or 7.7 mm FIAT-Revelli machine guns


See also


Related development

Related lists


References


  1. Kenneth Munson writing in Bombers 1914–19, Blandford 1968
  2. "Caproni Ca.36". Ministero Della Difesa. Archived from the original on 26 March 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  3. "Caproni Ca.3". Warbirds News. 10 February 2020. Retrieved 13 December 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. "Caproni Ca. 36". National Museum of the US Air Force. 7 April 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2016.



На других языках


- [en] Caproni Ca.3

[fr] Caproni Ca.33

Le Caproni Ca.3 était un bombardier lourd italien de la Première Guerre mondiale de type biplan bipoutre[1].

[it] Caproni Ca.33

Il Caproni Ca.33 era un biplano da bombardamento italiano della prima guerra mondiale. Versione rimotorizzata del precedente Ca.32 divenne il bombardiere alleato più impiegato nel conflitto, operando sia sul fronte occidentale che su quello austriaco. L'aereo, durante il conflitto designato Ca.3[1] dal Regio Esercito e 450 hp dalla ditta costruttrice, venne prodotto su licenza anche in Francia. L'ultimo sviluppo del modello, designato Ca.36 rimase in servizio fino alla seconda metà degli anni venti.



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