Although built in fewer numbers than the PZL P.11, the PZL P.24 was for
a period during the 1930's the fastest and most heavily armed
single-seat fighter in the world. Having acquired early notoriety at the
Paris Salon with their innovative wing design, the P.24 represented the
ultimate development of the family of fighter planes designed by Zygmunt
Pulawski and saw service in the air forces of four countries: Bulgaria,
Greece, Romania and Turkey.