The I.Ae. 22 DL was an Argentine advanced training aircraft designed by the Instituto Aerotécnico (AeroTechnical Institute) in 1943. It had a wooden structure which resembled the North American NA-16.
The I.Ae. 22 DL was a development of the I.Ae. D.L. 21, which was itself developed from the North American NA-16, which was also in service with the Argentine military at that time.
Argentine experience with the NA-16-4P and deteriorating political relations with the US led to the local development of the I.Ae. D.L. 21, which shared the NA-16 fuselage structure. However it proved too difficult to produce and an entirely new design (the I.Ae. D.L. 22) of similar configuration, but structurally different and optimized to available materials was built instead.
It had a wooden structure and a nine-cylinder I.Ae. 16 El Gaucho radial engine with a Hamilton Standard 2M-D-30 metallic propeller.
The prototype flew on 8 August 1944. Approximately 200 aircraft were built. A version with a Armstrong Siddeley Cheetah 25 radial engine and a Rotol constant speed propeller was designated I.Ae. 22-C.