  
       
        
       
      Bücker aircraft  
      Carl Clemens Bücker was a naval aviator 
      during the Great War; in 1921 founded in Sweden the Svenska Aero 
      Aktiebolaget, principally known by its fighter J.6 "Jaktfaik" which was 
      produced in short series for the aviation of the Scandinavian country. 
      Back to his natal Germany, in October 1933 he founds the Bücker-Flugzeubau, 
      whose first product is this graceful biplane designed by Anders J. 
      Andersson in collaboration with Bücker himself. 
       
      With interchangeable wooden twin-spar wings and the fuselage in steel 
      tube, it is all covered with cloth except for the engine's fairing and the 
      cabin sides that are covered with metallic sheet. Logically, it has got 
      double control and the landing gear is provided with oleoelastic shock 
      absorbers and brakes. 
       
      From the first flights accomplished by Joachim Von Kóppen, the success is 
      categorical, beginning with the first deliveries at the end of the same 
      1934. There is such a big demand that it is necessary to build a new 
      factory and if so the production figures are unknown in Germany, they have 
      to be counted by thousands. They export to many countries and it is built 
      under  license in four of them; only in Japan 1.254 of them are delivered. 
       
      Light and robust at the same time, it is easy to keep and repair and for 
      the pilot it is really nice to fly. Capable of manoeuvring and its 
      controls admirably coordinated, it is not, however, as easy to fly as it 
      seems - it requires a pilot awake at all times. It will never play tricks 
      on him; it is a perfect school airplane. On Second World War, besides 
      being a Luftwaffe standard trainer and most of the allies performed a 
      service of nightly harassment on the Russian front, armed with 
      antipersonnel bombs. 
       
      With the arrival at Spain of the first official forces of the Condor 
      Legion November 6th  1936, the first three Bü-I 31 get to Spain too, from 
      the sixty that should be received in total, some provided with the Hirth 
      engine of 80 HP and most of them with the 105 HP. They are initially 
      destined to the elemental school of El Copero (Seville) and afterwards to 
      other new centres. 
       
      Right in the post-war period CASA starts the manufacturing under license, 
      the first Spanish Bücker flying march 14th 1941. After building 
      two-hundred of them with German engines, the delivering of the ones 
      provided with the 
      Spanish "Tiger" starts in 1950, completing the orders in 1963 after the 
      building of three hundred of these last ones and transforming thirty more, 
      propelled before by the Hirth. 
  
      
             |