At the onset of
World War II, the
Swedish Air Force (
Flygvapnet) was equipped with largely obsolete
Gloster Gladiator (J 8) biplane fighters. To augment this, Sweden ordered 120
Seversky P-35 (J 9) and 144
Vultee P-66 Vanguard (J 10) aircraft from the United States. In October 1940, the United States declared an embargo against delivering the remainder of the orders to Sweden (60 P-35s had been delivered).
Flygvapnet suddenly faced a shortage of modern fighters. Several other foreign alternatives were considered: the Soviet
Polikarpov I-16 and
I153 were considered obsolete, the Finnish
VL Myrsky was rejected due to its all-wooden construction and while Japan offered the
Mitsubishi A6M, delivery from Japan was impractical. A batch of
Fiat CR.42 Falco (J 11) biplanes and
Reggiane Re.2000 Falco (J 20) were eventually purchased but this was clearly an interim solution. It was decided to design a new fighter to meet
Flygvapnets needs. As
Saab was running at full capacity building its single-engine
Saab 17 and twin-engined
Saab 18 bombers, a new organisation was set up to design and build the new aircraft, the
Kungliga Flygförvaltningens Flygverkstad i Stockholm ("Royal Air Administration Aircraft Factory in Stockholm",
FFVS). The design team would be led by
Bo Lundberg. {{Quote box The new aircraft, designated
J 22, was a mid-wing
cantilever monoplane with a retractable undercarriage and an enclosed cockpit. The narrow-track main landing gear retracted rearward entirely within the fuselage. To minimise the use of strategic materials, the aircraft was of mixed steel and wood construction, with a plywood-covered molybdenum steel tube
fuselage covered by moulded
plywood panels, and wings with welded steel spars and ribs covered by plywood. Power came from a Swedish copy of the
Pratt & Whitney R-1830 Twin Wasp, manufactured by
Svenska Flygmotor without a license at the time, although some sources state that after the end of the war, Svenska Flygmotor volunteered to pay a licence fee, with a symbolic US$1 eventually being agreed. While the two prototypes would be built at the
Flygtekniska försöksanstalten (National Aeronautical Research Institute), production aircraft would be assembled by a factory at
Stockholm Bromma Airport which would be built by, and leased from the Swedish airline
AB Aerotransport. Extensive use was made of sub-contractors, many of which (such as
AGA, and
Hägglund & Söner) were outside the aviation industry, to build sub assemblies of the J-22. The first prototype J 22 made its maiden flight on 20 September 1942 from
Bromma airport, with the second prototype flying on 11 June 1943. While both prototypes were destroyed in crashes, on 19 June and 20 August 1943 respectively, production had already been started prior to the prototypes flying. Deliveries of production J 22s, to the F9 air wing at
Gothenburg, began in October 1943. While delivery of the 198 production aircraft was planned to be completed by 1 July 1946,
strike action by factory workers disrupted these plans, and the final 18 J 22s were assembled by the
Flygvapnet workshops at
Arboga. The last J 22 was delivered on 6 April 1946. ==Operational history==