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.'' ==Design==