in
Trento,
Italy, on 5 July 2011.
radial engine of the restored Macchi M.20 at the
Gianni Caproni Museum of Aeronautics in
Trento,
Italy, on 23 August 2012. An M.20 on display at the
Gianni Caproni Museum of Aeronautics in
Trento,
Italy, is as of 2012 the oldest surviving example of an original Macchi-designed aircraft in Italy. Probably built sometime between 1920 and 1925, it subsequently was modified with the new wings and ailerons introduced in 1925. The
Società Anonima Aerocentro Emiliano purchased it in 1929, installed a
Salmson 9 AD engine in it, and in March 1930 registered it as
I-AABO. The Aero Club of
Rimini purchased it in September 1933, and subsequently it was written off after an accident. The
Milanese aeronautical engineer and aircraft manufacturer
Piero Magni purchased it, and in 1939 he modified it, giving it rounded and elongated wing tips, enlarged
cockpits, and different
fletchings, but in its modified form it did not receive a certificate of airworthiness. The
Caproni brothers acquired the aircraft's fuselage and wings from the aeronautical engineer and aviation pioneer
Pier Carlo Bergonzi during the 1950s, and it became part of the collection of the Gianni Caproni Museum of Aeronautics during the 1970s. It underwent restoration by the
Masterfly company between 1988 and 1990. It is painted in the markings of an unregistered M.20 racer of the 1924–1925 period. ==Operators==