The design was essentially a more powerful version of the
Lohner E, and became highly influential. Apart from licensed production by
UFAG, the L provided the basis for designs by other major manufacturers. In
Germany,
Hansa-Brandenburg manufactured a modified version of it as their first flying boat, the '
, and in Italy, a captured example was used as a pattern aircraft by Macchi, who produced it as the L.1'. In turn, the L.1 would provide the foundation for a large number of Macchi designs over the coming years. . The captured aircraft (serial L.40) was taken intact near the naval air station of
Porto Corsini. The captured flying boat was copied by Macchi-Nieuport and the L.1 was built within a month. The L.1s were delivered to Italian maritime reconnaissance and bombing units based on the Adriatic. An improved version was developed as the
Macchi L.2. A restored example of an Austro-Hungarian Lohner L (serial L.127) is preserved at the
Italian Air Force Museum at
Vigna di Valle. This model appears in the film Porco Rosso, by Studio Ghibli in 1992. ==Operational history==