The Caproni AP.1 equipped a total of eight
squadriglie (Italian air unit equivalent to half an
RAF squadron) of the assault wings of the
Regia Aeronautica. It took part in the
Spanish Civil War, but its unsatisfactory performance led to its quick replacement with the
Breda Ba.64,
Ba.65 and
Ba.88 types. Four examples were purchased by
El Salvador in 1938 for use in the
Escuadrilla de Caza of the
Salvadoran Air Force, in response to Honduras buying
North American NA-16. A fifth aircraft was supplied for no additional cost to replace an aircraft which crashed during an air display by an Italian test pilot to celebrate delivery of the AP.1s. The AP-1s at first proved popular in service, and after El Salvador's entry into the Second World War in December 1941, were used to carry out anti-submarine patrols along El Salvador's coast. Shortage of spare parts for the aircraft's engines and damage to the wooden structure due to the tropical conditions and
termites limited serviceability by mid-1943, and they were withdrawn from use in December 1944. In 1937,
Paraguay placed an order for 22 AP.1s (18 landplanes and 4 floatplanes) as part of a re-equipment programme following the end of the
Chaco War, but after the overthrow of
Rafael Franco's government in August 1937 led to the order being cut to seven landplanes, with 10 landplanes and four floatplanes joining the
Regia Aeronautica. Paraguay's AP.1s entered service in 1939, with three aircraft remaining in service during the
Paraguayan Civil War in 1947, flying a few reconnaissance and ground attack missions against the rebel forces. They were withdrawn from use in 1949. ==Variants==