The Vickers cal. 7,7 modificata (Modified Vickers caliber 7.7 mm) was an Italian aeronautical machine gun obtained by modifying, hence the name, the original Vickers cal. 7,7 (name used by the Regia Aeronautica to indicate the Vickers MK. I*).
With the end of the Great War, the Italian Air Force began a process of standardization and modernization of its armament.
It initially focused on standardization with the rapid retirement of the unsatisfactory 6.5 mm SIA mod.18 Tipo Aviazione and the slower and more progressive withdrawal from service of the Fiat Mod.14 Tipo Aviazione guns, thus achieving general standardization on the 7.7 mm caliber, with the Vickers cal. 7,7 guns used as fixed weapons in fighters and the Lewis cal. 7,7 guns as movable weapons for defensive positions.
Subsequently, it began to devote itself to its modernization with the adoption of new weapons, both through the purchase of foreign weapons (such as the French Darne cal. 7,7), and through the announcement of national competitions (which led to the adoption of the Breda Mod. SAFAT cal. 7,7 in 1933), and through the modernization of weapons retained in service (precisely the Vickers cal. 7,7 modificata).
Research into modifying the Vickers cal. 7,7 began in the first half of the 1920s, leading to the adoption of the new weapon in 1926.
The Vickers cal. 7,7 modificata was the standard weapon of Italian fighters and reconnaissance aircraft, together with the Darne cal. 7,7, from the second half of the 1920s until the adoption of the more modern Breda Mod. SAFAT cal. 7,7 on newly built aircraft in the early 1930s.
The Vickers cal. 7,7 modificata differs from the original Vickers cal. 7,7 (Vickers MK. I*) mainly in: