


I bought this plane years ago because it is bright, colorful and unusual. Though the lithographed nose cone looks like that of a Tupolev 104, I have never seen any real life proposal for a plane like this toy model. I suspect the designer was having a bit of fun with a wild imagination.
The logo is an "HK" in a diamond. I thought that this stood for Hammer and Kühlwein but I have also seen this label associated with "Huki" which I thought was a quite different toy maker.
The cartoons that constitute box art show two different planes. This one is CIII 566 but the other side shows #542 with four propellers. This jet plane just has no nacelles or props, with the lithographed jet engines instead. I can see raised fairings on the wings over which nacelles might be fitted. Creating this "jet" was a cost-cutting measure for the company: less material and less handiwork during assembly.
I have two other planes to complement this one: HK 541, a Boeing 247 in orange/cream, and HK 542 in silver with a quite different fuselage, with a flat top, but with the same wings.

