Macchi MC.200/202

Airframe courtesy of Printables.com
Fiat A.74 Engine by @Captain_Ahab_62

The Macchi MC.200 is an Italian single-seat, single-engine fighter developed and built by Aermacchi. The basic airframe was relatively unchanged during WWII, aside from the adoption of an open flight deck from the Serie 3 onwards. The aircraft is equipped with two 12.7x81mm SR Breda-SAFAT machine guns, mounted in the upper fuselage and synchronized with the propeller. The aircraft is powered by a Fiat A.74 14-cylinder radial engine, driving a three-bladed constant-speed metal airscrew.

The Macchi MC.202 is basically an MC.200 airframe, but fitted with a Daimler-Benz DB-601 V12 engine (the same engine as the Bf-109). A pair of .303-caliber Breda-SAFAT guns was added to the wings from the Serie 7 onwards, one in each wing. The canopy was reinstated, with the resulting airframe (MC.202 Serie 7) becoming the basis for the much more advanced MC.205.