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| This cool looking Swedish design, the FFVS J 22, first flew in September, 1942 and was introduced in October the following year. |
So, how many Check Your 6! gamers have the FFVS J 22 in their collections? I am guessing not many, mostly because it was a design created by a neutral country and not used in combat. But should that stop us from fielding a few of these diminutive fighters for some what-if encounters? Of course not!
I have a 1950s Jet Age scenario that features East Germans vs. Swedes, a completely hypothetical engagement, and it would not be much of a stretch to go back a decade or so and do something similar against a World War II backdrop. Why? Because I want to be able to use the sweet looking Swedish FFVS J 22, a radial engine fighter that, when flying mock combat against the P-51, could hold its own under 13,000 feet. The J 22 was available by late fall 1943, so German opponents (from a fighter perspective) could be the Messerschmitt Me 109G and the Focke-Wulf Fw 190A models. Now, I have not really delved into having very many German aircraft in my collection, but creating another what-if scenario might push me to obtain some mid to late war German fighters, which of course would find more historical uses.
Ratings for the J 22 might look something like this (very speculative and I am open to opinions to flesh out the stats):
| Image from Table Top Flights |
Okay, as stats are sort of worked out, where can one find the J 22 in miniature? Look no further than the detailed 3D prints offered by Table Top Flights. The J 22 is also offered in metal by Heroics & Ros, but the quality of the present-day 3D prints leaves the venerable H&R line in the dust.
Now, to create a scenario! Oh wait, I just did. Check it out on the Downloads page, called Encounter Over the Baltic.

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