Chapter 6. The Aeronautical Industry and the Great War

01 Fabbrica teleThe AER factory at Orbassano. Workshop for making canvas covering for aircraft wings

The advent of war brought considerable impulse to the increase in industrial aeronautical activity: FIAT and SPA increased their production of aircraft engines, producing more than 24,000 engines between 1914 and 1918.

FIAT

02 MARCHIO02As previously mentioned, the FIAT car company entered the aeronautical sector in 1908, manufacturing engines for airships. It subsequently began to produce aircraft engines.
During the course of the 1st World War, the 250 HP A.12-1 (and later the A.12 bis of 300-320 HP) aircraft engines were those produced in the greatest quantity in the FIAT workshops of Corso Dante. These were fitted to many Allied aircraft, including those of the British Royal Flying Corps, who preferred it for its heavy bombers over the Rolls-Royce “Eagle”, despite its higher cost. It was only in 1914 that FIAT began to build aircraft, initially under licence from Farman, building the 5b equipped with the 100 HP a.10 engine. In 1915-16 these began to be superseded by the “SP” ries (SP.2 and SP.3). The “SP’s”, designed by engineers Savoia and Pomilio and refined by the DTAM (Direzione Tecnica Aviazione Militare), were powered by the 250 HP A.12 engine. The Farman-Savoia was also known as the “type 1914”.

03 Corso DanteThe FIAT Aircraft Engine Workshops in Corso Dante (Turin)

The largest number of aircraft came from the factories in Via Madama Cristina and Via Nizza, where, following construction of Farman type 1914’s, production was concentrated on the SP.2 and SP.3, all robust but slow aircraft with twin tail booms.
By June 1914, the constant rise in production and the expectation of continued increases due to the continuation of the war induced FIAT to set up a company, the sia (Società Italiana Aviazione), that became the vehicle into which all the former aeronautical activities were channelled. It quickly became operational from the hangars of Mirafiori.

04 Fiat AS1The head of the sia design office was Eng. Torretta, who in collaboration with the DTAM, launched the “7B” project towards the end of 1916, powered by the 250 HP A.12 engine. This went into production the following year.
With the “7B1” and the “7B2” models Captain Laureati made two famous long-range flights, the non-stop Turin-Naples-Turin and Turin-London.
It was also with a SIA “7B1” that Gabriele d’Annunzio organized the reconnaissance mission preparatory to what became known as the “Mockery of Buccari”. The sia 7B1 took off from Tesséra aerodrome (Venice) with 2nd Lt. Lombardi as co-pilot and 2nd Lt. Campacci as observer and overflew the ports of Pola, Rijeka and Buccari. Campacci was able to take many photographs of the enemy installations and ships in the harbours, essential for the attack by sea which followed a few days later.
By 1918, the sia production had reached 7-8 aircraft per day and became renamed FIAT-Aviazione.
The 7B1 evolved into the 7b2 which sported a 300 HP A.12 Mk2 engine. It outclassed the most modern Austro-German aircraft both in speed and armament. Some 20 of these were sold to the Usa after being test-flown by a group of American pilots who came to Italy specifically for this with the Mayor of New York, Fiorello La Guardia.

05 TorrettaMirafiori 1918. Engineer Torretta, Technical Director of SIA with Chief
Test Pilot, Lt Brach Papa and Capt Pozzi, Test Pilot

Thanks to the development of  its aircraft production during the war, Turin attained a preeminent position in the Italian aeronautical industry. 
Following the 2nd World War, the FIAT Aircraft Section, which has moved to its own premises at Caselle in 1949, with the installation of a technical department for flight testing, built an Aircraft Electronics Center followed by the creation of experimental departments for the construction and testing of jet engines. This also began the epoch of such famous test pilots as Agostini, Cus, Catella, Marsan, Bignamini, Sanseverino, Quarantelli, Trevisan.

It is worth recalling, just as historic fact, that from its origins up until the year 1962 FIAT had produced:
• 55 types of aeronautical engine
• 166 types of aircraft between prototypes and derivates 

for a total production of:
• 32,000 aircraft engines
• 13,000 aircraft which were sold to 27 countries

06 FIAT CR20 Rosatelli
1928. CR.20 assembly line in the FIAT-Aviazione plant in Corso Marche (ex Pomilio and then Ansaldo)

This is neither the time nor the place to recount the history of FIAT’s aeronautical exploits – sufficient to say they began as an engine constructor (in 1908) then progressed into the construction of aircraft through the sia (in 1916), FIAT Aeritalia (in 1926), cmasa – Costruzioni Meccaniche Aeronautiche sa of Pisa (in 1931), and cansa of Cameri, when they acquired the former Gabardini (in 1939).
However, at the same time, it is impossible to proceed without mentioning two of their most important designers, men who made history: Celestino Rosatelli and Giuseppe Gabrielli. Rosatelli participated actively in the day to day affairs of the Aero Club of Turin becoming a Board Member in 1927.

Celestino Rosatelli

09 Rosatelli foto giovanile

Celestino Rosatelli, born in Belmonte Sabina (Rieti) in 1885, attended the School of Engineering in Rome, graduating in 1910.
In 1915 he joined the Army and was assigned to the DTAM (Direzione Tecnica Aeronautica Militare) in Turin where he came into contact with Savoia and Verduzio, participating in the design of the SVA (Savoia Verduzio Ansaldo).
Rosatelli’s reputation as a designer soon extended beyond the confines of the DTAM and in 1918, Senator Agnelli requested his assignment to the FIAT Aviation design department, where he quickly became its director.
Rosatelli designed a series of aircraft distinguished with the letter “R”, and in particular, the “BR” series, standing for Bomber Rosatelli and the “CR” series, for Caccia Rosatelli which have become part of the history of Italian aviation and beyond.
His first bomber design, in 1918, called the “BR”, was a 2-seater biplane with advanced features, powered by a FIAT “A.14” engine. In one of these, on the 21st of May 1919, Brach Papa set a height record of 7,250 metres (23,500 ft) and a speed record of 270 km/h (almost 170 mph).

10 Fiat BR20

11 Fiat CR1 300 12 BR1
Rosatelli designed more than 50 aircraft, and of these, more than 40 were built. There were a number of “BR” versions (BR, BR.1, BR.2, BR.3, BR.4, BR.20) and an even higher number of “CR” (fighter) versions (CR.1, CR.2, CR.5, CR.10, CR.20, CR.25, CR.30, CR.32, CR.33, CR.40, CR.41, CR.42).
In 1927 Rosatelli became a member of the Board of Directors of the Aero Club Torino during the presidency of Count Carlo Nicolis di Robilant and the vice presidency of Dr Edoardo Agnelli.
The year 1930 saw the emergence of the CR.20 which abandoned the canvas-covered, wood-framed concept, to become the first Italian aircraft with the fuselage metal. Its high performance gave birth to the military aerobatic team commanded by Rino Corso FOUGIER at the Campoformido airfield near Udine.
At the beginning of the ’30s, Rosatelli’s aircraft attained numerous firsts for speed and height. His last project was the CR.42 in 1939.
He died in Turin on the 23rd of September 1945.

13 CR32 di tre quarti

 

Giuseppe Gabrielli

Giuseppe Gabrielli (Caltanissetta, 26th February 1903) came to Turin as an adolescent. He graduated as an Aeronautical Engineer in 1925.
In 1930 he became Professor of Aeronautical Construction at the Turin Polytechnic and in 1931, Senator Agnelli, the founder of FIAT, who had intuitively perceived his great potential, asked him to join his aircraft design department. Thus began the collaboration which endured up until the ’80’s, during which time no less than 142 projects bearing the mythical letter “G” took shape.
His first project for FIAT was the G.2 in 1932, a three-engined six-passenger monoplane transport aircraft.
In 1937, he designed the G.50, the first low-wing Italian fighter, and in 1942, followed this with the G.55, one of the fastest and powerfull Italian fighters of the 2nd World War.
At the end of the war he was invited to join the FIAT Board of Directors, taking over from Celestino Rosatelli (who had died in 1945) as Director of Aircraft Design.

13 Fiat G2 small 16 G55

17 G46 13

18 G91

From then onwards, he begun to design jet aircraft, leading to the construction of the FIAT G.80, the first Italian jet two-seat trainer, powered by a De Havilland "Goblin", built in Aeritalia in Turin and assembled at the military base of Amendola (Foggia). Here its maiden flight took place on Dec. 9, 1951, in the hands of the test pilot, Vittore Catella.
Following further developments he went on to design his masterpiece, the G.91, which won the NATO competition for a light fighter and of which more than 800 examples were produced. The maiden flight of the G.91 took place from Caselle airport on August 9th 1956 with the test pilot Riccardo Bignamini, a former Italian Air Force officer, at the controls.
In 1960, he designed the G.222 transport, a twin-engined tactical STOL aircraft, which among its many missions, saw combat service with UN peacekeeping forces in Ethiopia and Bosnia.
He made important industrial contributions to the licence production of the De Haviland D.H.100 Vampire, the North American F-86K Sabre and the Lockheed F-104G Starfighter.
In 1982 he became President of FIAT AVIO.
He died in Turin, aged 84, on the 29th of November 1987.

19 G222

 AER

20 aer 2In 1915, initially with French capital, before passing into control of the Italian Mario Marzocchi, the AER company was founded in Orbassano and opened up a factory (part of which still exists today) in Via Piossasco. It produced the reconnaissance Caudron g.3, g.3bis and the twin-engined g.4 aircraft under licence. These went to equip the first reconnaissance squadrons at the front; AER also produced the SP.3 SP.4 and the sva for a total of around 1000 aircraft. AER went on to open two further factories, one in Turin in Via Pollenzo for the production of radiators and one at Porte di Pinerolo, for the production of fuel tanks and control rods.
Between them, the three factories had a work force of over 700 people, mainly women, who were particularly skilful at sewing the fabric used to cover the aircraft. In 1917, at Rivalta, on the right hand side of the road which runs from Orbassano to Piossasco (the FIAT factory today), AER built and inaugurated an airfield to test-fly its aircraft. This was definitively closed at the end of the World War II.

 

21 caudron G4 reconnaissance 22 NEW Caudron G3 I AVEC

21 MARCHIO05In 1916, the Pomilio factory (Società Anonima Costruzioni Aeronautiche O. Pomilio & Co.) was founded to build the “SP” (Savoia-Pomilio) aircraft designed by Engineers Savoia and Pomilio. By 1917, this had more than 1,000 workers and a production of over 150 aircraft per month! Considering its importance, the following chapter is entirely dedicated to this.

 

Ansaldo

22 MARCHIO07There were many constructors who flocked to the aeronautic sector. One in particular, Ansaldo of Genoa, bid for and won the contract proposed by the DTAM in 1917 for the construction of the sv aircraft, (a lightweight, highly aerodynamic fighter) designed by Engineers Umberto Savoia and Rodolfo Verduzio (later assisted by Verduzio’s promising pupil, the young engineer Celestino Rosatelli, who went on to become FIAT’s chief aircraft designer).

25 fabbrica1918. The finishing room at the Ansaldo factory, where almost 12,000 aircraft were built

24 MARCHIO09As the large numbers of aircraft they had contracted to build were well beyond the capabilities of its small factory at Borzoli (Genoa), Ansaldo began to look for suitable companies to buy, particularly companies already operating in Turin, the area with the most promising potential for aeronautical development.
The sit Company was thus taken over in 1917 by Ansaldo to produce the mythical “sv” at a rate of between 40-60 per month, and began to call them “sva” (Savoia Verduzio Ansaldo). The former sit factory became known as the “Cantiere Aeronautico Ansaldo 3” and produced more than 350 examples of various versions of the sva up to the end of the war.

25 1917 SVA 51917. Gio.Ansaldo & Co, Aircraft Constructors – SVA 5 aircraft

28 Ansaldo Officina1918. Ansaldo factory No. 5. The workshop for the assembling of the SVAs

In 1918, Pomilio also sold his 10,000 sq. metre factory in Corso Marche and its related aerodrome (today the Torino-Aeritalia airfield) to Ansaldo. Known as the “No. 5 Ansaldo Aeronautical Workshop”, this was soon turning out the sva in considerable numbers.

29 1922 A300 4


30 AnsaldoSVA Dannunzio NPalli9 agosto 1918. Gabriele d’Annunzio aboard an
SVA 10 modified, with pilot Natale Palli

about to depart for the raid on Vienna

31 Savigliano Ca33Managers and aeronautical technicians of the Savigliano factory with a Caproni Ca.33

The sva 5’s, with SPA 6 engines, took their place in history on August 9, 1918, at the height of the 1st ww, when 11 such aircraft, commanded by Gabriele d’Annunzio and Natale Palli of Casale Monferrato, carried out their daring raid on Vienna.
For a number of months, production of the “P.E” continued, but this was phased out in favour of the new “A3” version with its redesigned wings, fin and tailplane. In the months which followed the end of the war, production of the A3’s ceased, and Ansaldo, due to the industrial crisis which followed the end of the war, reduced its aircraft-building activities, keeping production going only at its “No 5 Workshop” (the ex-Pomilio factory) changing its name first to “Aeronautica Ansaldo” then later to “Aeronautica d’Italia S.A.”
In 1927, the factory was sold to FIAT and assumed the name of “FIAT Aeronautica d’Italia S.A.”.
To close this list of major aircraft constructors in the Turin area, let us not forget:

Officine di Savigliano

Savigliano Workshops (one of the most prestigious Italian industrial companies of the twentieth century), were founded in Turin on July 17, 1880, with the main objective of undertaking the building and repair of railway running stock and mechanical construction in general. As of 1911/12 they also ventured into the aviation world, with the production, under license from the German company Maybach, of engines for Zeppelin airships.
Effectively the aviation business really began following the outbreak of the Great War with the license production of the SP.2 and SP.3 scouts in 1916, the sia 7B1 in 1916-18 and maintenance of the Caproni ca.33 bombers as of 1917.
Engineer Darbesio, the Asteria designer also collaborated in the aircraft production of the Savigliano workshops.
A large factory was specially built for these activities. This included a department for the construction of propellers and an adjoining airfield for flight testing.

32 Savigliano 3The Savigliano factory with its adjacent airfield

23 fabbricaInside the Moncenisio factory during construction of the P.D.

Officine Moncenisio

Fortunato Bauchiero (born in 1860 in Banengo, part of Montiglio d’Asti) together with the Torinese industrialist and financier Cesare Goldmann, constituted the Società Anonima Bauchiero on September 29, 1906, for railroad construction and supplies, with headquarters in Piazza Carlo Felice, Turin and factories in Condove in the Susa valley.
In 1918 the name was changed to “Officine Moncenisio”.
During World War i, beginning from 1916, the company produced saml Aviatik B.I. aircraft under license, followed one year later with the Pomilio pd and the SAML S.2, for a total of about six hundred aircraft.
Once the war was over, the company, which had set its own airfield near Orbassano, exploited the skills acquired, devoting itself to the repair and conversion of aircraft, with contracts for the FIAT B.R., as well as testing of the Ansaldo sva aircraft.
In 1918, together with the Farina company in Turin, the Officine Moncenisio completed the well-known Adamoli-Cattani experimental biplane fighter.
During the period of its greatest expansion, the workshops of the Officine Moncenisio, which employed about 1200 workers, occupied an area of about 170,000 square meters in Condove, of which more than half were covered.
34 NEW Ansaldo Sva da internet 35 NEW Caccia Adamoli Cattani 1917 18

Farina Coachworks

36 NEW Battista Pininfarina1Battista Farina known as “Pinin”

This company, which would become one of the most prestigious designers of the Turin car industry, was founded by Battista “Pinin” Farina (Turin 1893 – Lausanne 1966) for the production of car bodyworks.
Farina was interested in all forms of technical progress and was particularly fascinated by aeronautics and flight. On account of the large demand from the Army for aircraft, required for World War I, from 1916 onwards, the company also undertook the manufacture of aircraft, producing various series of the Aviatik training biplane under license (it had been developed by the German company Automobil und Aviatik ag), receiving a praise from the Military Aviation Technical Office for the quality of the work.
In 1918, the final year of the Great War, it also participated in the construction of the experimental Adamoli-Cattani biplane fighter with its 200 HP Le Rhône engine, designed by Enea Cattani, Chief of the Pomilio Research and Experience Office.
The construction of the prototype began in 1918 at the Farina factory in Turin and was later completed by the Officine Moncenisio in their factory at Condove (Turin) in collaboration with Pomilio.
In 1918, following the construction of this prototype, the Military Aeronautical Engineers subjected all the various parts including the fuselage to a succession of static tests. The plane was then declared to be ready for flight testing but this was fated never to be undertaken.
The reasons were twofold: the death of the pilot, Carlo Pietro Adamoli, and the end of the conflict. By now it was 1919 and new aircraft development was abandoned.

37 NEW Adamoli Cattani Farina 19181918. Battista Farina at the controls of an Aviatik

38 NEW carrozzeria Farina 11918. Farina factory - guillottine and pressed workshop

With the end of the Great War, most of the national aircraft factories underwent drastic downsizing.

The Turin factories were no exception.

However, a number of these remained active, mainly those which were capable of successfully returning to peace-time production, such as FIAT, Farina and Savigliano plus others like the riv (bearings) factories which had been instrumental in the production of engines for Italian aviation.

38 MARCHIO11 Fiat CMASA

39 BGA Fiat
FIAT CMASA BGA (Bombardiere Grande Autonomia)
airplane designed by Ing. Aldo Guglielmetti

41 1938 Fiat CMASA RS 14

 

freccia
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