:The Saiman 202 was a two-seater monoplane single-engine military trainer; first flown in 1938, it was built in more than 400 units; these were operated by both the Regia Aeronautica and the Luftwaffe during the war and by the Aeronautica Militare after the end of the conflict.
British Museum | Museum of Modern Art | Metropolitan Museum of Art | American Museum of Natural History | Victoria and Albert Museum | Natural History Museum | San Francisco Museum of Modern Art | Honolulu Museum of Art | museum | Whitney Museum of American Art | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | Los Angeles County Museum of Art | Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum | National Air and Space Museum | Brooklyn Museum | National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum | Hermitage Museum | National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame | Museum of Contemporary Art | Field Museum of Natural History | Philadelphia Museum of Art | Imperial War Museum | Smithsonian American Art Museum | National Museum | National Museum of Natural History | Museum of Fine Arts, Houston | Denver Art Museum | Cleveland Museum of Art | Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles | American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics |
A single Bristol Coanda Monoplane survives, in the Gianni Caproni Museum of Aeronautics, Trento, Italy, being the oldest surviving Bristol aircraft still in existence.