Two F.K.52s were bought by the Swedish count Carl Gustav von Rosen and donated to the Finnish Air Force to be employed during the Winter War. They were flown to Finland on 18th January 1940 and in March they saw some action as they bombed and strafed Soviet troops attacking over ice at Virolahti. During this conflict they saw a total of 15 sorties and both were damaged.
They were assigned to Lentolaivue 6, operating in the Hanko area in 1941, but both were destroyed during the Continuation War. On 16th August 1941 one was lost during a forced landing after a leaflet-dropping mission over Hanko and force-landed 80 Km (50 km) south of Tallinn, killing both pilot and observer. Estonian guerrillas burned the remains of the plane and buried the crew.
The other plane was destroyed later, in 1943 when it crash landed north of the village Pernaa, at Kauhava. The pilot bailed out and survived but the airplane was deemed unrecoverable.
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