Back in late September, 2019, we reported on the then-recent first flight of a 1970s-vintage Aermacchi MB-326KZ military jet trainer. This was an unusual situation in that this specific airframe had never flown before, since the original construction contract (for the Zairean military) ended up getting cancelled before Aermacchi could complete its manufacture. With the contract's cancellation, the partially assembled aircraft went into covered storage, with the hopes that another customer would pay for its completion. This never materialized... until the advent of the jet warbird movement in Italy, which saw Renzo Catellani’s Volafenice flying collection purchase and complete the tandem-seat light attack aircraft, powered by a Rolls-Royce (Armstrong Siddeley) Viper Mk.600 turbojet. The red tape surrounding warbird operation in Italy is complex, as one might expect, and the bureaucratic process required that the aircraft's certification move from experimental (test aircraft) to the standard category. Presently, the airworthiness certificate is not standard but rather a flight permit for a 'replica' airplane - since this aircraft never left the original manufacture as a certified, flying aircraft, but rather as a partially completed shell.