The Lohner company called this plane the
Type T, but the Austro-Hungarian Navy called it the
Type L. It looked much like the earlier Lohner E, but it was larger and had a more powerful engine. Pilot and observer sat side-by-side, with the observer on the right. On some planes the observer was armed with a swiveling Schwarzlose machine-gun. The Type T's were widely used in the Adriatic and over the Italian mainland, making up much of the
KuK Kriegsmarine's inventory in 1915 and 1916.
Later orders in 1915 were fulfilled by the modified
Lohner Tl, where 'l' means
Leicht or
light. Of the 107 Type L's completed, 33 were the six-bay Type T and 74 were of the lightened four-bay Type Tl.
When a Type T (L40) was captured by the Italians on 27 May 1915, it was analyzed and led to the
Macchi L.1 flying boats. (The Macchi L.1 was almost a direct copy.)
For more details and gaming information, see
https://linen.miraheze.org/wiki/Lohner_T.I.