Bücker Bü-133 D-1 "Jungmeister"
Based on the two-seater basic training aircraft "Jungmann", the German factory "Bücker" developed the single-seater aerobatic plane "Jungmeister" which became the standard training aircraft for the training of fighter pilots in the German, Swiss and Spanish air forces. Airplane Bücker "Jungmeister" designed by Anders Anderson, it showed outstanding flight characteristics in aerobatic flying and won numerous awards at competitions.
Until the middle of the last century, it was the best single-seater aerobatic plane in the world. The "Bücker" factory presented the director of the aircraft factory "Utva" Aleksandar Stanojević one copy of "Jungmann" (Bücker Bü 131) which arrived in the country on March 27, 1941. Due to the state of war, the plane was not registered, it made two flights to Pančevo, before flying to the Zemun airport on April 6, where it was then captured by the Germans after the occupation of Yugoslavia.
During the war, there were three "Jungmeister" type airplanes in the Independent State of Croatia. At the end of the Second World War, these aircraft were seized by the People's Liberation Army of Yugoslavia and until 1956 they were used for pilot training and participation in air rallies that popularized aviation after the war. One of them is the displayed aircraft, which was handed over to the Aeronautical Museum in 1962.
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