The Gyöngyös 33 was the first sailplane designed in Hungary, making its first flight in June 1933. It set several national records, using ridge lift rather than thermal soaring.
The Gyöngyös 33 was the first Hungarian designed sailplane and was named after its place and year of manufacture. It was designed by Zoltán Janka and built in the MOVERO (Aviation Section of Hungarian National Defence Association) workshops at Gyöngyös. His design target was to produce an aircraft that would out-perform the 1928 RRG Professor. It was an all wood monoplane with a two-part wing built around a forward main spar and a rear false spar. The inner area of each part was rectangular in plan, tapering strongly outboard. The leading edges ahead of the main spar were plywood-covered, as was the whole wing at the inner-outer junction; the rest was fabric-covered. An aileron filled the whole trailing edge of each outer section. The two parts joined at a narrow centre-section on a raised fuselage pylon and were braced on each side with a V-strut from the fuselage bottom to the wing spars at the inner-outer junctions.
The Gyöngyös 33's six-sided fuselage was formed by a wooden frame and was plywood-covered. The pilot had an open cockpit ahead of the wing leading edge with the wing pylon immediately behind him. A rubber-sprung landing skid below him ran from the nose almost to the trailing edge. The fuselage tapered rearwards to a cantilever empennage. The fin was small and ply-covered with a tall rudder which, like the all-moving tailplane apart from its leading edge, was fabric covered.
The first flight took place on 11 June 1933. A fortnight later the Gyöngyös 33 slope-soared for 5 h 43 m, gaining of altitude, a Hungarian record. On 27 June it set a national duration record of 10 h 7 m. In 1934 it made a flight.
The Gyöngyös 33 is now on display in the Hungarian Technical and Transportation Museum, Budapest.