The IAR 80 was a version of the PZL
In January 1936 the Rumanian government acquired the manufacturing license of the P.Z.L. P.11c fighter. The I.A.R. firm built 95 units as P.11F (380 kph). In November they also acquired the manufacturing license for 25 units of the P.Z.L. P.24E (430 kph), but the model became obsolete that same month when it was learned that the Polikarpov I-16 Type 5, a low wing monoplane with retractable landing gear capable of flying at 454 kph, had entered into combat in Spain beating the Heinkel He 51 of the Legion Condor. Three months later the Messerschmitt Bf 109 B-1 (462 kph) entered service with the Luftwaffe.
At the end of 1936 the Pulawski fighters had reached the limit of their development; the drag generated by the bracing struts and the spatted landing gear prevented them from exceeding 430 kph. When knowing the performance of the Bf 109 B-1, I.A.R. started the design of a low-wing version of the P.24E called I.A.R. 80. The new fighter, powered by an I.A.R.14K radial engine, should use the fuselage and tail surfaces of the P.24, attached to a wing based on the Savoia Marchetti S.M.79B bomber wing (decreasing its dimensions by 50 per cent) containing a retractable Messier undercarriage.
One month later the annexation of Sudetenland to the Third Reich, Romania acquired twelve Hawker Hurricane Mk.IA (518 kph), after learning that the Bf 109 B-2 (462 kph) had come into service. An even faster version, called Bf 109 E-1 (574 kph) did it in February 1939.
On 15 March 1939 Germany invaded the remainder of Czechoslovakia. Nine days later Romania was forced to sign an economic treaty to supply oil to the Reich from the fields of Ploesti, in exchange for thirty fighters Heinkel 112E. In April, the prototype of the I.A.R.80 flew at 510 kph. A month later Romania signed a treaty of territorial integrity with Great Britain and France.
On 23 August 1939 the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact was signed. Five days later the Hawker Hurricanes Mk.IA and the first He 112E were delivered to the Royal Rumanian Air Force (FARR). On 1 September 1939 the Third Reich invaded Poland, followed by a Soviet attack on the day 17. At the end of that year the FARR ordered fifty Messerschmitt Bf 109 E-3 and hundred I.A.R. 80 fighters.
On 28 June 1940 the U.S.S.R. annexed the Romanian regions of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina. Two months later Germany and Italy forced Romania to cede northern Transylvania to Hungary and southern Dobruja to Bulgaria. On 23 November 1940, as a result of a coup, Romania signed the Axis Tripartite Pact and the FARR received the first Bf 109 E-3. Between February and May 1941 I.A.R. delivered the first batch of seventy I.A.R. 80 fighters. On 22 June, Romania was forced to participate in the invasion of the U.S.S.R. Operation Barbarossa on the pretext of recovering Bessarabia.
At that time the FARR had fifty-eight I.A.R. 80/80A, twenty-three He 112E, thirty Bf 109 E-3, ten Hawker Hurricane Mk.IA, twenty P.Z.L. P.24E, thirty-two P.Z.L. P.11F and twenty-four P.Z.L. P.11c from the Polish Air Force. In combat the P.Z.L. fighters were superior to the Soviet I-16 during the Bessarabian campaign and being used as fighter-bombers from October 1941.
The Hurricanes were soon useless, due to lack of spares, and the He 112E, fitted with 20 mm cannons, mainly used on strafing missions, suffering heavy losses because of the absence of armour. The FARR was forced to depend more and more on the I.A.R. 80, a fighter that equalled the Bf 109 E in climb and manoeuvrability, able to reach 500 kph with an engine of just 930 hp.
The I.A.R. 80 of the first production batch suffered engine problems and failures of the undercarriage retraction system. They were armed with 4 x 7.92 mm FN/Browning machine guns. The IAR 80A with 6 x 7.92 mm FN and 1,025 hp I.A.R. K14 1000A engine was delived in May 1941. The I.A.R. 80B had larger wings, a 4 x 7.92 FN armament and 2 x 13.2 FN machine guns. It was delivered in June 1942, taking part in the battle of Stalingrad.
The 13.2 mm FN were replaced by two 20 mm Ikaria cannons in the I.A.R. 80C, delivered on December 1942.
The I.A.R. 81 was built as a dive bomber, armed with 6 x 7.92 mm FN machine guns. The fighter version, called I.A.R. 81C, was armed with 2 x 7.92 FN and two 20 mm MG 151 cannons. The four-hundred-and-seventy-four I.A.R. 80/81 that had been built achieved 500 aerial victories during the Second World War. From 1942 they were gradually outclassed by the newest Soviet fighters. In 1943 all aircraft were relegated to home defence.
The I.A.R. 14K engine could not overcome the 1,025 hp and the Germans denied the license to manufacture the 1,700 hp BMW 801 radial engine. Early 1942 a 1,200 hp Jumo 211 in-line engine, from a Savoia-Marchetti S.M. 79B bomber, was installed in the I.A.R. 80 c/n 111, but during the flight tests the aircraft experienced destructive vibration problems and the continuation of the experiments was dismissed. At the end of 1943 a DB 601 Aa from a Bf 109 E-3 was installed in the I.A.R. 80 c/n 13, doing some test flights.
On 29 June 1943 the I.A.R. 81C c/n 326 was experimentally equipped with a 1,475 hp DB 605A engine.
On 24 August 1944, before the Soviet advance, Romania changed sides carrying out operations of combat against the Third Reich until the end of the Second World War in Europe.