airport The first operator of the S.73 was the Belgian airline
SABENA, which purchased five
Gnome-Rhône 9Kfr Mistral Major-powered S.73s from Savoia-Marchetti in 1935, introducing them on European routes in the summer of 1935. Two of these aircraft were lost in accidents in 1935. Seven more S.73s, powered by
Gnome-Rhône 14K Mistral Major engines, were built for SABENA under
license by
SABCA in 1936–1937, which allowed the S.73 to replace the Fokker F.VII on the service from Belgium to the
Congo. This service took four days (with no overnight flying) with a flight time of 44 hours. The second operator of the S.73 was the Italian airline
Ala Littoria, which received at least 21 examples, powered by a variety of engines, including the
Piaggio Stella X, the
Wright R-1820 and the
Alfa Romeo 126 RC.10. They were used on services within Europe and to Italy's African empire. At the outbreak of
World War II the S.73 was already obsolete, but some of the aircraft were pressed into service with the
Regia Aeronautica for operations in
Abyssinia and
Spain. Nine S.73s were present in Eastern Africa and used as military transports. Owing to the poor military situation, with British Commonwealth forces on the brink of capturing
Addis Ababa, the
Duke of Aosta, the
Viceroy of
Italian East Africa, ordered the remaining three S.73s to be evacuated. After several days of preparation, they took off from Addis Ababa on 3 April 1941 with 36 men on board, planning to fly to
Kufra in Libya, away, requiring additional fuel tanks in the fuselage. All three aircraft force-landed in the desert, but refuelled at
Jeddah, before resuming their journey. After several days of difficulties, including sand storms that clogged up the air filters, they took off again. Initially, it was planned to make another landing in Beirut but in the meantime
Erwin Rommel had conquered
Benghazi, so this was the final destination of the three aircraft. Two aircraft, after 10 hours of flying and the men inside almost killed by fumes of the fuel auxiliary tanks, landed at Benghazi, after and over a month of travel. Seven
Belgian S.73s were flown to the
United Kingdom in May 1940 and were pressed into service by the
Royal Air Force, and, operated by the SABENA flight crews, were used to fly ammunition to the
British Expeditionary Force in Northern France. After two were destroyed by the
Luftwaffe at
Merville on 23 May, SABENA ordered its surviving aircraft, including the five S.73s, to move to France in preparation for transfer to the Belgian Congo. After the surrender of Belgium on 28 May the SABENA fleet was placed at the disposal of the French government and used to ferry pilots between the French mainland and French North Africa. Following
France's surrender on 22 June 1940, the SABENA fleet, including the S.73s, was seized by Italy and operated by the
Regia Aeronautica. The S.73s still in Italy were used to equip 605 and 606
Squadriglie. Four S.73s survived until the 1943 armistice, three being used by the Allies and one by the pro-Axis government; all had been taken out of service by the end of the war. ==Accidents and incidents==