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The first of an original order of 100 machines entered service
in July 1918. The A.1s were kept away from the front lines and
mostly assigned to home defence duties. In the four months
before the Armistice, A.1s scored only one aerial victory, over
an Austrian reconnaissance aircraft. It was during this time
that Ansaldo engaged in a number of promotional activities,
including dubbing the aircraft as Balilla, flying
displays in major Italian cities, and in August donating an
example to Italian ace Antonio Locatelli as his personal
property amidst a press spectacle. (This latter publicity stunt
backfired somewhat when one week later a mechanical fault in the
aircraft caused Locatelli to make a forced landing behind enemy
lines and be taken prisoner). Despite all this, the air force
ordered another 100 machines, all of which were delivered before
the end of the war. At the armistice, 186 were operational, of
which 47 aircraft were ordered to remain on hand with training
squadrons, and the remainder were to be put into storage. |