Any discussion mentioning DUX toys should also discuss their Ju-87 B Stuka.
It featured moveable control surfaces including dive brakes, a swastika and camouflaged two-color camouflage on the top surfaces with a sky blue underside, a tin radio antenna post with string attaching to the vertical tail, and even depicted the large B model engine oil cooler in the light color which eased finding oil leaks on the actual airplane in the field after a combat mission.
JEP, Jouets de Paris - a 1920 French toy firm created received the full inventory of the DUX toy company’s Stuka parts and tooling after the war as war reparations. The Stuka toy first appeared in the JEP catalogue in 1945, only months following the end of the war and it rapidly became a popular one in France. When the inventory of DUX parts became exhausted, JEP made new ones with its own logo and the French military markings. Some of these have parts with the DUX logo still stamped on them, others have a mix of DUX and JEP markings or are all JEP marked.
The Dux firm survived intact and went on to make some well known toys in the 1950s such as the Astroman robot, the popular Condor flying helicopter, a variety of vehicle constructor sets, and many small scale toy vehicles.
Above is the German made example of the DUX Stuka Ju-78 B. Note the embossed DUX name and Swallow-in-a-circle logo on different parts such as the propeller hub, and fuselage sides and wings. Wing span is 12 inches
Above is the French JEP made example of the Stuka Ju-78 B. Some had a mix of parts embossed DUX and/or logo and also with the JEP cartouche. It is 19 1/4 inches in length.