Macchi M.C.72 mock-up unveiling - Idroscalo di Desenzano del Garda, Italy 7/5/23

ImageDedicated forum to share your own recent photos with the rest of the community.
Please note large files may exist here before you start browsing!

Forum rules
ImageThis is the forum to share your recent aviation photos with the rest of the community, being photos not older than six months at the moment of topic opening. Theme-based topics, not about recent events, should go into the sub-forum.
Although we will not screen beforehand, we reserve the right to delete any images, especially if clearly unsharp or otherwise low in quality. For more information on how to upload you images, check this post.
In topic titles, please use airfield names in stead of just codes, and be clear about what kind of photos your viewers can expect (e.g. CIV/MIL, location etc.).

Finally, bring any photo criticism understandable and to the point, not cynical or offensive! Simultaneously, do not feel offended by criticism per se, but simply explain your motives, taste et cetera, or ignore if you wish so.
Post Reply
Dysko
Scramble Rookie
Scramble Rookie
Posts: 74
Joined: 27 Feb 2011, 18:47
Type of spotter: F5
Subscriber Scramble: Dysko
Location: Milan - Italy
Contact:

Macchi M.C.72 mock-up unveiling - Idroscalo di Desenzano del Garda, Italy 7/5/23

Post by Dysko »

This morning Comitato Idroscalo di Desenzano del Garda officially publicly unveiled a full-scale mock-up of the Macchi M.C.72 hydroracer.
Image

Image

This mock-up is equipped with electric motors to spin the propellers.
Image

In the Idroscalo there is also a full-scale mock-up of a Ansaldo SVA 5, a Great War bomber and reconnaissance aircraft. It became famous for the Flight over Vienna organized by poet Gabriele d'Annunzio on 9 August 1918.
Image

The Idroscalo also hosts several memorabilia from the Schneider Trophy era.
Fiat A.20 engine
Image

Image

Image

Image

Image

Some historical notes for those who survived until now.

The M.C.72 was an hydroracer designed by Mario Castoldi for the 1931 edition of the Schneider Trophy.
This plane was equipped with a Fiat AS.6 engine (which was made with 2 twin tandem engines) with 2 counterrotating propellers. The engine generated a lot of heat, which had to be dissipated with heat sinks on the floats, on the wings and part of the fuselage.
Unfortunately, the development of this plane turned out to be quite troublesome, and 2 deadly accidents claimed the lives of test pilots Giovanni Monti and Stanislao Bellini. The plane was not ready in time for the Schneider Trophy, which was won by the United Kingdom with the Supermarine S.6B.
The floatplane was then used by Reparto Alta Velocità (High-Speed Detachment) based in Desenzano del Garda (in the same place where this replica is on display) to break the speed record. The record was broken on 23 October 1934 by Maresciallo Francesco Agello with a speed of 709,209 km/h. It remained the fastest airplane in the world until 1939, when the record was broken by the Heinkel He 100. Due to a waning interest in seaplanes, the M.C.72 still remains the fastest piston-powered seaplane (the fastest seaplane is the prototype Convair F2Y Sea Dart, the only supersonic seaplane ever built).
The Italian aviation industry was unable to capitalize on the design of the M.C.72, and the Royal Italian Air Force entered WW2 with obsolete aircraft, such as the Fiat C.R.42 biplane.
English designers used the Supermarine S.6B as a basis for the Spitfire and the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine.

The original record-setting airframe is on display in the Italian Air Force Historical Museum in Vigna di Valle, near Rome. This mock-up will be on display at the Italian Air Force 100th Anniversary Airshow in Pratica di Mare, 17th/18th June.
Post Reply

Return to “Aviation Photo Forum”