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Mitsubishi A6M Zero

The Mitsubishi A6M "Zero" is a long-range carrier-based fighter aircraft formerly manufactured by Mitsubishi Aircraft Company, a part of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and was operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy from 1940 to 1945. The A6M was designated as the Mitsubishi Navy Type 0 carrier fighter (零式艦上戦闘機, rei-shiki-kanjō-sentōki), or the Mitsubishi A6M Rei-sen. The A6M was usually referred to by its pilots as the Reisen (零戦, zero fighter), "0" being the last digit of the imperial year 2600 (1940) when it entered service with the Imperial Navy. The official Allied reporting name was "Zeke", although the name "Zero" (from Type 0) was used colloquially as well.

A6M "Zero"
A6M3 Model 22 N712Z, operated by the Commemorative Air Force So. Cal. Wing[Note 1]
Role Carrier-based fighter aircraft
National origin Japan
Manufacturer Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
First flight 1 April 1939
Introduction 1 July 1940
Retired 1945 (Japan)
Primary user Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service
Produced 1939–1945
Number built 10,939
Developed from Mitsubishi A5M
Variants Nakajima A6M2-N
Developed into Mitsubishi A7M

The Zero is considered to have been the most capable carrier-based fighter in the world when it was introduced early in World War II, combining excellent maneuverability and very long range.[1] The Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service (IJNAS) also frequently used it as a land-based fighter.

In early combat operations, the Zero gained a reputation as a dogfighter,[2] achieving an outstanding kill ratio of 12 to 1,[3] but by mid-1942 a combination of new tactics and the introduction of better equipment enabled Allied pilots to engage the Zero on generally equal terms.[4] By 1943, the Zero was less effective against newer Allied fighters due to design limitations. It lacked hydraulic boosting for its ailerons and rudder, rendering it extremely difficult to maneuver at high speeds. By 1944, with Allied fighters approaching the A6M levels of maneuverability and consistently exceeding its firepower, armor, and speed, the A6M had largely become outdated as a fighter aircraft. However, as design delays and production difficulties hampered the introduction of newer Japanese aircraft models, the Zero continued to serve in a front-line role until the end of the war in the Pacific. During the final phases, it was also adapted for use in kamikaze operations.[5] Japan produced more Zeros than any other model of combat aircraft during the war.[6]

Design and development

The Mitsubishi A5M fighter was just entering service in early 1937, when the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) started looking for its eventual replacement. On 5 October 1937, it issued "Planning Requirements for the Prototype 12-shi Carrier-based Fighter", sending them to Nakajima and Mitsubishi. Both firms started preliminary design work while awaiting more definitive requirements a few months later.[7]

Based on the experiences of the A5M in China, the IJN sent out updated requirements in October, calling for a speed of 270 kn (310 mph; 500 km/h) at 4,000 m (13,000 ft) and a climb to 3,000 m (9,800 ft) in 9.5 minutes. With drop tanks, the Navy wanted an endurance of two hours at normal power, or six to eight hours at economical cruising speed. Armament was to consist of two 20 mm cannons, two 7.7 mm (.303 in) machine guns and two 60 kg (130 lb) bombs. A complete radio set was to be mounted in all aircraft, along with a radio direction finder for long-range navigation.[8] The maneuverability was to be at least equal to that of the A5M, while the wingspan had to be less than 12 m (39 ft) to allow for use on aircraft carriers.

Nakajima's team considered the new requirements unachievable and pulled out of the competition in January. Mitsubishi's chief designer, Jiro Horikoshi, thought that the requirements could be met, but only if the aircraft were made as light as possible. Every possible weight-saving measure was incorporated into the design. Most of the aircraft was built of a new top-secret aluminium alloy developed by Sumitomo Metal Industries in 1936. Called "extra super duralumin" (ESD), it was lighter, stronger and more ductile than other alloys (e.g. 24S alloy) used at the time, but was prone to corrosive attack, which made it brittle.[9] This detrimental effect was countered with an anti-corrosion coating applied after fabrication. No armour protection was provided for the pilot, engine or other critical points of the aircraft, and self-sealing fuel tanks, which were becoming common among other combatants, were not used. This made the Zero lighter, more maneuverable, and one of the longest-ranged single-engine fighters of World War II, which made it capable of searching out an enemy hundreds of kilometres away, bringing it to battle, then returning to its base or aircraft carrier. However, that tradeoff in weight and construction also made it prone to catching fire and exploding when struck by enemy fire.[10]

With its low-wing cantilever monoplane layout, retractable, wide-set conventional landing gear and enclosed cockpit, the Zero was one of the most modern carrier-based aircraft in the world at the time of its introduction. It had a fairly high-lift, low-speed wing with very low wing loading. This, combined with its light weight, resulted in a very low stalling speed of well below 60 kn (110 km/h; 69 mph). This was the main reason for its phenomenal maneuverability, allowing it to out-turn any Allied fighter of the time. Early models were fitted with servo tabs on the ailerons after pilots complained that control forces became too heavy at speeds above 300 kilometres per hour (190 mph). They were discontinued on later models after it was found that the lightened control forces were causing pilots to overstress the wings during vigorous maneuvers.[11]

Name

The A6M is usually known as the "Zero" from its Japanese Navy type designation, Type 0 carrier fighter (Rei shiki Kanjō sentōki, 零式艦上戦闘機), taken from the last digit of the Imperial year 2600 (1940) when it entered service. In Japan, it was unofficially referred to as both Rei-sen and Zero-sen; Japanese pilots most commonly called it Zero-sen, where sen is the first syllable of sentōki, Japanese for "fighter plane".[Note 2][12]

In the official designation "A6M", the "A" signified a carrier-based fighter, "6" meant that it was the sixth such model built for the Imperial Navy, and "M" indicated Mitsubishi as the manufacturer.

The official Allied code name was "Zeke", in keeping with the practice of giving male names to Japanese fighters, female names to bombers, bird names to gliders, and tree names to trainers. "Zeke" was part of the first batch of "hillbilly" code names assigned by Captain Frank T. McCoy of Nashville, Tennessee (assigned to the Allied Technical Air Intelligence Unit (ATAIU) at Eagle Farm Airport in Australia), who wanted quick, distinctive, easy-to-remember names. The Allied code for Japanese aircraft was introduced in 1942, and McCoy chose "Zeke" for the "Zero". Later, two variants of the fighter received their own code names. The Nakajima A6M2-N floatplane version of the Zero was called "Rufe", and the A6M3-32 variant was initially called "Hap". General "Hap" Arnold, commander of the USAAF, objected to that name, however, so it was changed to "Hamp".

Operational history

 
Mitsubishi A6M2 "Zero" Model 21 takes off from the aircraft carrier Akagi, to attack Pearl Harbor.
 
The cockpit (starboard console) of an A6M2 which crashed into Building 52 at Fort Kamehameha during the attack on Pearl Harbor, killing the pilot.
 
Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero wreck abandoned at Munda Airfield, Central Solomons, 1943
 
A6M2 Zero photo c. 2004
 
Carrier A6M2 and A6M3 Zeros from the aircraft carrier Zuikaku preparing for a mission at Rabaul
 
A6M3 Model 22, flown by Japanese ace Hiroyoshi Nishizawa over the Solomon Islands, 1943
 
Wrecked A6M Zero in Peleliu jungle

The first Zeros (pre-series of 15 A6M2) went into operation with the 12th Rengo Kōkūtai in July 1940.[13] On 13 September 1940, the Zeros scored their first air-to-air victories when 13 A6M2s led by Lieutenant Saburo Shindo, escorting 27 G3M "Nell" medium-heavy bombers on a raid of Chunking, attacked 34 Soviet-built Polikarpov I-15s and I-16s of the Chinese Nationalist Air Force, claimed "all 27" of the Chinese fighters shot down without loss to themselves, however Major Louie Yim-qun had in fact nursed his I-15 riddled with 48 bullet holes back to base, and Lieutenant Gao Youxin claimed to have shot down one of Lt. Shindo's Zeroes, but at most 4 Zeroes sustained some damage in the 1/2 hour-long dogfight over Chunking.[14][15] By the time they were redeployed a year later, the Zeros had shot down 99 Chinese aircraft[16] (up to 266 according to other sources).[13]

At the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor, 521 Zeros were active in the Pacific, 328 in first-line units.[17] The carrier-borne Model 21 was the type encountered by the Americans. Its tremendous range of over 2,600 kilometres (1,600 mi) allowed it to range farther from its carrier than expected, appearing over distant battlefronts and giving Allied commanders the impression that there were several times as many Zeros as actually existed.[18]

The Zero quickly gained a fearsome reputation.[2] Thanks to a combination of unsurpassed maneuverability – compared to contemporary Axis fighters – and excellent firepower, it easily disposed of Allied aircraft sent against it in the Pacific in 1941.[19][20] It proved a difficult opponent even for the Supermarine Spitfire. "The RAF pilots were trained in methods that were excellent against German and Italian equipment but suicide against the acrobatic Japs", as Lt.Gen. Claire Lee Chennault had to notice.[21] Although not as fast as the British fighter, the Mitsubishi fighter could out-turn the Spitfire with ease, sustain a climb at a very steep angle, and stay in the air for three times as long.[22]

Allied pilots soon developed tactics to cope with the Zero. Due to its extreme agility, engaging a Zero in a traditional, turning dogfight was likely to be fatal.[23] It was better to swoop down from above in a high-speed pass, fire a quick burst, then climb quickly back up to altitude. A short burst of fire from heavy machine guns or cannon was often enough to bring down the fragile Zero. These tactics were regularly employed by Grumman F4F Wildcat fighters during Guadalcanal defense through high-altitude ambush, which was possible due to an early warning system consisting of Coastwatchers and radar.[24] Such "boom-and-zoom" tactics were also successfully used in the China Burma India Theater (CBI) by the "Flying Tigers" of the American Volunteer Group (AVG) against similarly maneuverable Japanese Army aircraft such as the Nakajima Ki-27 "Nate" and Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar". AVG pilots were trained by their commander Claire Chennault to exploit the advantages of their P-40s, which were very sturdy, heavily armed, generally faster in a dive and level flight at low altitude, with a good rate of roll.[25]

Another important maneuver was Lieutenant Commander John S. "Jimmy" Thach's "Thach Weave", in which two fighters would fly about 60 m (200 ft) apart. If a Zero latched onto the tail of one of the fighters, the two aircraft would turn toward each other. If the Zero followed his original target through the turn, he would come into a position to be fired on by the target's wingman. This tactic was first used to good effect during the Battle of Midway and later over the Solomon Islands.

Many highly experienced Japanese aviators were lost in combat, resulting in a progressive decline in quality, which became a significant factor in Allied successes. Unexpected heavy losses of pilots at the Battles of the Coral Sea and Midway dealt the Japanese carrier air force a blow from which it never fully recovered.[26][27]

Short film Recognition of the Japanese Zero Fighter (1943), intended to help U.S. airmen quickly distinguish the Zero from friendly aircraft, with Ronald Reagan as pilot Saunders.

Throughout the Battle of Midway Allied pilots expressed a high level of dissatisfaction with the F4F Wildcat. The Commanding Officer of USS Yorktown noted:

The fighter pilots are very disappointed with the performance and length of sustained fire power of the F4F-4 airplanes. The Zero fighters could easily outmaneuver and out-climb the F4F-3, and the consensus of fighter pilot opinion is that the F4F-4 is even more sluggish and slow than the F4F-3. It is also felt that it was a mistake to put 6 guns on the F4F-4 and thus to reduce the rounds per gun. Many of our fighters ran out of ammunition even before the Jap dive bombers arrived over our forces; these were experienced pilots, not novices.[28]

They were astounded by the Zero's superiority:[29]

In the Coral Sea, they made all their approaches from the rear or high side and did relatively little damage because of our armor. It also is desired to call attention to the fact that there was an absence of the fancy stunting during pull outs or approaches for attacks. In this battle, the Japs dove in, made the attack and then immediately pulled out, taking advantage of their superior climb and maneuverability. In attacking fighters, the Zeros usually attacked from above rear at high speed and recovered by climbing vertically until they lost some speed and then pulled on through to complete a small loop of high wing over which placed them out of reach and in position for another attack. By reversing the turn sharply after each attack the leader may get a shot at the enemy while he is climbing away or head on into a scissor if the Jap turns to meet it.[28]

In contrast, Allied fighters were designed with ruggedness and pilot protection in mind.[30] The Japanese ace Saburō Sakai described how the toughness of early Grumman aircraft was a factor in preventing the Zero from attaining total domination:

I had full confidence in my ability to destroy the Grumman and decided to finish off the enemy fighter with only my 7.7 mm machine guns. I turned the 20mm cannon switch to the 'off' position, and closed in. For some strange reason, even after I had poured about five or six hundred rounds of ammunition directly into the Grumman, the airplane did not fall, but kept on flying! I thought this very odd—it had never happened before—and closed the distance between the two airplanes until I could almost reach out and touch the Grumman. To my surprise, the Grumman's rudder and tail were torn to shreds, looking like an old torn piece of rag. With his plane in such condition, no wonder the pilot was unable to continue fighting! A Zero which had taken that many bullets would have been a ball of fire by now.[31]

When the powerfully armed Lockheed P-38 Lightning, armed with four "light barrel" AN/M2 .50 cal. Browning machine guns and one 20 mm autocannon, and the Grumman F6F Hellcat and Vought F4U Corsair, each with six AN/M2 .50 calibre Browning guns, appeared in the Pacific theater, the A6M, with its low-powered engine and lighter armament, was hard-pressed to remain competitive. In combat with an F6F or F4U, the only positive thing that could be said of the Zero at this stage of the war was that, in the hands of a skillful pilot, it could maneuver as well as most of its opponents.[18] Nonetheless, in competent hands, the Zero could still be deadly.

Due to shortages of high-powered aviation engines and problems with planned successor models, namely the superior Mitsubishi A7M2 Reppū, the Zero remained in production until 1945, with over 10,000 of all variants produced.

Allied analysis

Chinese opinions

The Japanese deployed the A6M during the Second Sino-Japanese War. Inevitably some machines were lost, with at least two falling more-or-less intact into Chinese hands. The first known example, an A6M2 (the 12th of the 15th pre-production aircraft, Serial V-110), fell near Fainan Island. On 18 September 1940 a team, including Western volunteers assisting the Chinese, examined the wreck. It was largely intact, and a detail report was compiled and sent to the USA. The second, an A6M2-21 (Serial V-173), made a forced landing near Tietsan airfield 17 February 1941. The pilot was shot before he could destroy his plane, the fuel system fixed, and it was taken into Chinese service with the serial P5016. The aeroplane was extensively flown & studied by a team which included Gerhard Neumann, and a detailed & illustrated report was sent to Washington. Overall they were impressed with the quality of the machine, less so by the performance - although this was later put down to using 85 octane fuel rather than the 100 octane required by the Sakae engine.[32]

American opinions

The American military discovered many of the A6M's unique attributes when they recovered a largely intact specimen of an A6M2, the Akutan Zero, on Akutan Island in the Aleutians. During an air raid over Dutch Harbor on 4 June 1942, one A6M fighter was hit by ground-based anti-aircraft fire. Losing oil, Flight Petty Officer Tadayoshi Koga attempted an emergency landing on Akutan Island about 20 miles (32 km) northeast of Dutch Harbor, but his Zero flipped over on soft ground in a sudden crash-landing. Koga died instantly of head injuries (his neck was broken by the tremendous impact), but his wingmen hoped he had survived and so went against Japanese doctrine to destroy disabled Zeros.[33] The relatively-undamaged fighter was found over a month later by an American salvage team and was shipped to Naval Air Station North Island, where testing flights of the repaired A6M revealed both strengths and deficiencies in design and performance.[30][34]

The experts who evaluated the captured Zero found that the plane weighed about 2,360 kg (5,200 lb) fully loaded, some 1,260 kg (2,780 lb) lighter than the F4F Wildcat, the standard United States Navy fighter of the time. The A6M's airframe was "built like a fine watch"; the Zero was constructed with flush rivets, and even the guns were flush with the wings. The instrument panel was a "marvel of simplicity… with no superfluities to distract [the pilot]". What most impressed the experts was that the Zero's fuselage and wings were constructed in one piece, unlike the American method that built them separately and joined the two parts together. The Japanese method was much slower, but resulted in a very strong structure and improved close maneuverability.[30]

American test pilots found that the Zero's controls were "very light" at 320 km/h (200 mph), but stiffened at faster speeds (above 348 km/h (216 mph)) to safeguard against wing failure.[35] The Zero could not keep up with Allied aircraft in high-speed maneuvers, and its low "never exceed speed" (VNE) made it vulnerable in a dive. Testing also revealed that the Zero could not roll as quickly to the right as it could to the left, which could be exploited.[33] While stable on the ground despite its light weight, the aircraft was designed purely for the attack role, emphasizing long range, maneuverability, and firepower at the expense of protection of its pilot. Most lacked self-sealing tanks and armor plating.[30]

British opinions

Captain Eric Brown, the Chief Naval Test Pilot of the Royal Navy, recalled being impressed by the Zero during tests of captured aircraft. "I don't think I have ever flown a fighter that could match the rate of turn of the Zero. The Zero had ruled the roost totally and was the finest fighter in the world until mid-1943."[3]

Variants

 

A6M1, Type 0 Prototypes

The first two A6M1 prototypes were completed in March 1939, powered by the 580 kW (780 hp) Mitsubishi Zuisei 13 engine with a two-blade propeller. It first flew on 1 April, and passed testing within a remarkably short period. By September, it had already been accepted for Navy testing as the A6M1 Type 0 Carrier Fighter, with the only notable change being a switch to a three-bladed propeller to cure a vibration problem.

A6M2a Type 0 Model 11

 
Two Zeros over China

While the Navy was testing the first two prototypes, they suggested that the third be fitted with the 700 kW (940 hp) Nakajima Sakae 12 engine instead. Mitsubishi had its own engine of this class in the form of the Kinsei, so they were somewhat reluctant to use the Sakae. Nevertheless, when the first A6M2 was completed in January 1940, the Sakae's extra power pushed the performance of the Zero well past the original specifications.

The new version was so promising that the Navy had 15 built and shipped to China before they had completed testing. They arrived in Manchuria in July 1940, and first saw combat over Chungking in August. There they proved to be completely untouchable by the Polikarpov I-16s and I-153s that had been such a problem for the A5Ms when in service. In one encounter, 13 Zeros shot down 27 I-15s and I-16s in under three minutes without loss. After hearing of these reports, the Navy immediately ordered the A6M2 into production as the Type 0 Carrier Fighter, Model 11. Reports of the Zero's performance slowly filtered back to the US. They by most US military officials, who thought it impossible for the Japanese to build such an aircraft.

A6M2b Type 0 Model 21

 
A6M2 "Zero" Model 21 of Shōkaku prior to attack on Pearl Harbor, 7 December 1941

After the delivery of the 65th aircraft, a further change was worked into the production lines, which introduced folding wingtips to allow them to fit on aircraft carriers.[17] The resulting Model 21 would become one of the most produced versions early in the war. A feature was the improved range with 520 L (140 US gal) wing tank and 320 L (85 US gal) drop tank. When the lines switched to updated models, 740 Model 21s had been completed by Mitsubishi, and another 800 by Nakajima. Two other versions of the Model 21 were built in small numbers, the Nakajima-built A6M2-N "Rufe" floatplane (based on the Model 11 with a slightly modified tail), and the A6M2-K two-seat trainer of which a total of 508 were built by Hitachi and the Sasebo Naval Air Arsenal.[36]

A6M3 Type 0 Model 32

 
A6M3 Model 32

In 1941, Nakajima introduced the Sakae 21 engine, which used a two-speed supercharger for better altitude performance, and increased power to 840 kW (1,130 hp). A prototype Zero with the new engine was first flown on 15 July 1941.[37]

The new Sakae was slightly heavier and somewhat longer due to the larger supercharger, which moved the center of gravity too far forward on the existing airframe. To correct for this, the engine mountings were cut back by 185 mm (7.3 in) to move the engine toward the cockpit. This had the side effect of reducing the size of the main fuselage fuel tank (located between the engine and the cockpit) from 518 L (137 US gal) to 470 L (120 US gal). The cowling was redesigned to enlarge the cowl flaps, revise the oil cooler air intake, and move the carburetor air intake to the upper half of the cowling.[38][39]

The wings were redesigned to reduce span, eliminate the folding tips, and square off the wingtips. The inboard edge of the aileron was moved outboard by one rib, and the wing fuel tanks were enlarged accordingly to 420 L (110 US gal). The two 20 mm wing cannon were upgraded from the Type 99 Mark l to the Mark II,[38] which required a bulge in the sheet metal of the wing below each cannon. The wings also included larger ammunition boxes and thus allowing 100 rounds per cannon.

The Sakae 21 engine and other changes increased maximum speed by only 11 km/h (6.8 mph) compared to the Model 21, but sacrificed nearly 1,000 km (620 mi) of range.[37] Nevertheless, the navy accepted the type and it entered production in April 1942.[40]

The shorter wingspan led to better roll, and the reduced drag allowed the diving speed to be increased to 670 km/h (420 mph). On the downside, turning and range, which were the strengths of the Model 21, suffered due to smaller ailerons, decreased lift and greater fuel consumption. The shorter range proved a significant limitation during the Solomons Campaign, during which Zeros based at Rabaul had to travel nearly to their maximum range to reach Guadalcanal and return.[41] Consequently, the Model 32 was unsuited to that campaign[40] and was used mainly for shorter range offensive missions and interception.

This variant was flown by only a small number of units, and only 343 were built.

A6M3 Type 0 Model 22

In order to correct the deficiencies of the Model 32, a new version with folding wingtips and redesigned wing was introduced. The fuel tanks were moved to the outer wings, fuel lines for a 330 L (87 US gal) drop tank were installed under each wing and the internal fuel capacity was increased to 570 L (150 US gal). More importantly, it regained its capabilities for long operating ranges, similar to the previous A6M2 Model 21, which was vastly shortened by the Model 32.

However, before the new design type was accepted formally by the Navy, the A6M3 Model 22 already stood ready for service in December 1942. Approximately 560 aircraft of the new type had been produced in the meantime by Mitsubishi Jukogyo K.K.[42]

According to a theory, the very late production Model 22 might have had wings similar to the shortened, rounded-tip wing of the Model 52.[43] One plane of such arrangement was photographed at Lakunai Airfield ("Rabaul East") in the second half of 1943, and has been published widely in a number of Japanese books. While the engine cowling is the same of previous Model 32 and 22, the theory proposes that the plane is an early production Model 52.[44]

The Model 32, 22, 22 kou, 52, 52 kou and 52 otsu were all powered by the Nakajima (Sakae) 21型 engine.[41] That engine kept its designation in spite of changes in the exhaust system for the Model 52.

A6M4 Type 0 Model 41/42

Mitsubishi is unable to state with certainty that it ever used the designation "A6M4" or model numbers for it. However, "A6M4" does appear in a translation of a captured Japanese memo from a Naval Air Technical Arsenal, titled Quarterly Report on Research Experiments, dated 1 October 1942.[45] It mentions a "cross-section of the A6M4 intercooler" then being designed. Some researchers believe "A6M4" was applied to one or two prototype planes fitted with an experimental turbo-supercharged Sakae engine designed for high altitude.[46] Mitsubishi's involvement in the project was probably quite limited or nil; the unmodified Sakae engine was made by Nakajima.[41] The design and testing of the turbo-supercharger was the responsibility of the First Naval Air [Technical] Arsenal (第一海軍航空廠, Dai Ichi Kaigun Kōkūshō) at Yokosuka.[45] At least one photo of a prototype plane exists. It shows a turbo unit mounted in the forward left fuselage.

Lack of suitable alloys for use in the manufacture of a turbo-supercharger and its related ducting caused numerous ruptures, resulting in fires and poor performance. Consequently, further development of a turbo-supercharged A6M was cancelled. The lack of acceptance by the Navy suggests that it did not bestow model number 41 or 42 formally, although it appears that the arsenal did use the designation "A6M4". The prototype engines nevertheless provided useful experience for future engine designs.[47]

A6M5 Type 0 Model 52

 
Mitsubishi A6M5 Model 52s among other aircraft types abandoned by the Japanese at the end of the war (Atsugi Naval Air Base) and captured by US forces.
 
A6M5c Zeros preparing to take part in a kamikaze attack in early 1945

Sometimes considered as the most effective variant,[48] the Model 52 was developed to again shorten the wings to increase speed and dispense with the folding wing mechanism. In addition, ailerons, aileron trim tab and flaps were revised.[49][50] Produced first by Mitsubishi, most Model 52s were made by Nakajima. The prototype was made in June 1943 by modifying an A6M3 and was first flown in August 1943.[51] The first Model 52 is said in the handling manual[52] to have production number 3904,[53] which apparently refers to the prototype.

Research by Mr. Bunzo Komine published by Mr. Kenji Miyazaki states that aircraft 3904 through 4103 had the same exhaust system and cowl flaps as on the Model 22.[54] This is partially corroborated by two wrecks researched by Mr. Stan Gajda and Mr. L. G. Halls, production number 4007 and 4043, respectively.[55][verification needed][56][verification needed][57][verification needed] (The upper cowling was slightly redesigned from that of the Model 22.[38]) An early production A6M5 Zero with non-separated exhaust, with an A6M3 Model 22 in the background. A new exhaust system provided an increment of thrust by aiming the stacks aft and distributing them around the forward fuselage. The new exhaust system required "notched" cowl flaps and heat shields just aft of the stacks. (Note, however, that the handling manual translation states that the new style of exhaust commenced with number 3904. Whether this is correct, indicates retrofitting intentions, refers to the prototype but not to all subsequent planes, or is in error, is unclear.) From production number 4274, the wing fuel tanks received carbon dioxide fire extinguishers.[58][59] From number 4354, the radio became the Model 3, aerial Mark 1, and at that point it is said the antenna mast was shortened slightly.[60] Through production number 4550, the lowest exhaust stacks were approximately the same length as those immediately above them. This caused hot exhaust to burn the forward edge of the landing gear doors and heat the tires. Therefore, from number 4551 Mitsubishi began to install shorter bottom stacks.[61] Nakajima manufactured the Model 52 at its Koizumi plant in Gunma Prefecture.[62] The A6M5 had a maximum speed of 565 km/h (351 mph) at 6,000 m (20,000 ft), reaching that altitude in 7:01 minutes.[63]

Subsequent variants included:

  • A6M5a, Model 52甲 (, 52a) – Starting at Mitsubishi number 4651, an armament change substituted the belt-fed Type 99-2 Mark 4 cannon, with 125 rounds per gun, in place of the drum-fed Type 99-2 Mark 3 cannon that carried 100 rounds per gun. Hence, the bulge in the underside of the wing for each cannon's ammunition drum was deleted and the ejection port for spent cartridge cases was moved. Thicker wing skinning was installed to permit higher diving speeds.[64]
  • A6M5b, Model 52乙 (Otsu, 52b) – Armament change: The 7.7 mm (.303 in) Type 97 gun (750 m/s (2,500 ft/s) muzzle velocity and 600 m (2,000 ft) range) in the right forward fuselage was replaced by a 13.2 mm Type 3 Browning-derived gun (790 m/s (2,600 ft/s) muzzle velocity and 900 m (3,000 ft) range, with a rate of fire of 800 rounds per minute) with 240 rounds. The larger weapon required an enlarged opening, creating a distinctive asymmetric appearance to the top of the cowling, and a revised gas outlet near the windscreen. In addition, each wing cannon received a fairing at the wing leading edge. A plate of armored glass 45 mm (1.8 in) thick was fitted to the windscreen. A larger propeller spinner was fitted, suggesting a change to the propeller.[65] The type of ventral drop tank was changed, it now had fins and was suspended on a slanted pipe. The first of this variant was completed in April 1944 and it was produced until October 1944.[66]
  • A6M5c, Model 52丙 (Hei, 52c) – Armament change: One 13.2 mm (.51 in) Type 3 machine gun was added in each wing outboard of the cannon, and the 7.7 mm gun on the left side of the cowl was deleted. Four racks for rockets or small bombs were installed outboard of the 13 mm gun in each wing. Engine change: Some sources state that the hei had a Sakae 31 engine[67] In addition, a 55 mm (2.2 in) thick piece of armored glass was installed at the headrest and an 8 mm (0.31 in) thick plate of armor was installed behind the seat. The mounting of the central 300 L (79 US gal) drop tank changed to a four-post design.[68] Wing skin was thickened further. The first of this variant was completed in September 1944.[64] Because of the gain in weight, this variant was used mainly for intercepting B-29s and special attack.[69]
  • A6M5-S (A6M5 Yakan Sentōki) – Armament change: To intercept B-29s and other night-flying aircraft, an air arsenal converted some Model 52s to night fighters.[70] They were armed with one 20 mm Type 99 cannon behind the pilot, aimed upward, similar in intent to the Luftwaffe's Schräge Musik installation.[71] However, lack of radar prevented them from being very effective.

Some Model 21 and 52 aircraft were converted to "bakusen" (fighter-bombers) by mounting a bomb rack and 250 kg (550 lb) bomb in place of the centerline drop tank.

Up to seven Model 52 planes were ostensibly converted into A6M5-K two-seat trainers.[36] Mass production was contemplated by Hitachi, but not undertaken.[72]

A6M6 Type 0 Model 53

The A6M6 was developed to use the Sakae 31a engine, featuring water-methanol engine boost and self-sealing wing tanks.[73][74] During preliminary testing, its performance was considered unsatisfactory due to the additional engine power failing to materialize and the unreliability of the fuel injection system.[75][76] Testing continued on the A6M6 but the end of war stopped further development. Only one prototype was produced.

A6M7 Type 0 Model 62/63

The A6M7 was the last variant to see service. It was designed to meet a requirement by the Navy for a dedicated attack/dive bomber version that could operate from smaller aircraft carriers[8] or according to another source, replace the obsolete Aichi D3A.[77] The A6M7 had considerable design changes compared to previous attempts to make the A6M suitable for dive bombing. This included a reinforced vertical stabilizer, a special bomb rack, provision of two 350-litre drop tanks and fixed bomb/rocket swing stoppers on the underside of the wings.[78][79][80][77][8] It was also given a new powerplant, the Sakae-31 engine, producing 1,130 hp on take-off. The A6M7 had a similar armament layout to the A6M5c with the exception of the bomb centreline bomb rack, capable of carrying 250 kg or 500 kg bombs. Entering production in May 1945,[8][78][80][79] the A6M7 was also used for Kamikaze attacks.[81][82]

A6M8 Type 0 Model 64

 
A6M8 Type 64: one of two prototypes being tested by US Forces at Misawa Air Base

Similar to the A6M6 but with the Sakae (now out of production) replaced by the Mitsubishi Kinsei 62 engine with 1,163 kW (1,560 hp), 60% more powerful than the A6M2's engine.[13] This resulted in an extensively modified cowling and nose for the aircraft. The carburetor intake was much larger, a long duct like that on the Nakajima B6N Tenzan was added, and a large spinner — like that on the Yokosuka D4Y Suisei with the Kinsei 62 — was mounted. The armament consisted of two 13.2 mm (.52 in) Type 3 machine guns and two 20 mm (.80 in) Type 99 cannons in the wings. In addition, the Model 64 was modified to carry two 150 l (40 US gal) drop tanks on either wing in order to permit the mounting of a 250 kg (550 lb) bomb on the underside of the fuselage. Two prototypes were completed in April 1945 but the chaotic situation of Japanese industry and the end of the war obstructed the start of the ambitious program of production for 6,300 A6M8s, only the two prototypes being completed and flown.[13][83]

Production

A6M Production: Nagoya, Mitsubishi Jukogyo K.K.[84]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
1939 1 1 1 3
1940 1 1 1 1 4 3 9 8 9 19 23 19 98
1941 23 23 30 27 30 26 25 30 33 43 52 60 402
1942 60 58 55 54 58 45 46 51 64 65 67 69 692
1943 68 69 73 73 73 73 77 85 93 105 110 130 1,029
1944 125 115 105 109 95 100 115 135 135 145 115 62 1,356
1945 35 59 40 37 38 23 15 52 299
Total 3,879

Not included:

  • A second A6M1 was completed on 17 March 1939,[85] but was written off without explanation after completing the company's flight test program in July 1940.[86]
A6M Production: Ota, Nakajima Hikoki K.K.[87]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
1941 1 6 7
1942 19 22 35 31 36 34 52 65 75 88 99 118 674
1943 110 119 133 144 148 152 153 156 243 182 202 225 1,967
1944 238 154 271 230 232 200 163 232 245 194 109 206 2,474
1945 216 108 207 230 247 185 138 85 1,416
Total 6,538

Trainer

A6M Trainer Production: Chiba, Hitachi Kokuki K.K.[88] and Omura, Dai-Nijuichi K.K.[89]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
1943 4 5 6 8 8 8 10 10 10 12 12 15 110
1944 12 16 17 18 17 23 30 29 15 23 27 25 252
1945 23 8 34 21 31 23 15 155
Total 517

Total production

  • According to USSBS Report: 10,934
    • includes: 10,094 A6M, 323 A6M2-N and 517 A6M-K builds.
  • According to Francillon: 11,291
    • includes: 10,449 A6M,[90] 327 A6M2-N,[91] 508 A6M2-K and 7 A6M5-K builds.[36]

Operators

  Japan

Surviving aircraft

 
A6M2 Model 21 on display at the Pacific Aviation Museum Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, United States. This aircraft was made airworthy in the early 1980s before being grounded in 2002.[92]
 
A6M5 on display at the National Air and Space Museum, United States
 
A6M5 on display at Yūshūkan in Tokyo, Japan
 
A6M on display at the National Museum of Nature and Science, Japan
 
An A6M at the National Museum of the USAF, painted to represent a section leader's aircraft from the Japanese aircraft carrier Zuihō during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea.[93]

Like many surviving World War II Japanese aircraft, most surviving Zeros are made up of parts from multiple airframes. As a result, some are referred to by conflicting manufacturer serial numbers. Other planes, such as those recovered after decades in a wrecked condition, have been reconstructed to the extent that the majority of their structure is made up of modern parts. All of this means the identities of surviving aircraft can be difficult to confirm.

Most flying Zeros have had their engines replaced with similar American units. Only one, the Planes of Fame Air Museum's A6M5, has the original Sakae engine.[94]

The rarity of flyable Zeros accounts for the use of single-seat North American T-6 Texans, with heavily modified fuselages and painted in Japanese markings, as substitutes for Zeros in the films Tora! Tora! Tora!, The Final Countdown, and many other television and film depictions of the aircraft, such as Baa Baa Black Sheep (renamed Black Sheep Squadron). One Model 52 was used during the production of Pearl Harbor.

Australia

China

Germany

Indonesia

 
A6M on display at Dirgantara Mandala Museum, Indonesia

Japan

New Zealand

  • 3835/3844 – On display at the Auckland War Memorial Museum in Auckland, Auckland Region.[114] It was taken to New Zealand from Bougainville in October 1945 on board the ferry Wahine which was being used to repatriate troops. The Zero had been caught on the ground on Bougainville, damaged in the bombing during the Allied Bougainville campaign in November 1943. The plane had been hidden by the Japanese who had restored it with the goal of flying it off the island. The plane was retrieved by RNZAF intelligence officers in September 1945 at the Japanese airfield at Buin, in southern Bougainville.[115]

United Kingdom

United States

Specifications (A6M2 (Type 0 Model 21))

 
Orthographically projected diagram of the Mitsubishi A6M Zero

Data from The Great Book of Fighters,[35] Aircraft Profile #129: The Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero-sen[153]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 9.06 m (29 ft 9 in)
  • Wingspan: 12 m (39 ft 4 in)
  • Height: 3.05 m (10 ft 0 in)
  • Wing area: 22.44 m2 (241.5 sq ft)
  • Aspect ratio: 6.4
  • Airfoil: root: MAC118 or NACA 2315; tip: MAC118 or NACA 3309[154]
  • Empty weight: 1,680 kg (3,704 lb)
  • Gross weight: 2,796 kg (6,164 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 2,796 kg (6,164 lb)
  • Fuel capacity: 518 L (137 US gal; 114 imp gal) internal + 1 × 330 L (87 US gal; 73 imp gal) drop tank
  • Powerplant: 1 × Nakajima NK1C Sakae-12 14-cylinder air-cooled radial piston engine, 700 kW (940 hp) for take-off
710 kW (950 hp) at 4,200 m (13,800 ft)
  • Propellers: 3-bladed Sumitomo-Hamilton constant-speed propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 533 km/h (331 mph, 288 kn) at 4,550 m (14,930 ft)
  • Cruise speed: 333 km/h (207 mph, 180 kn)
  • Never exceed speed: 600 km/h (370 mph, 320 kn)
  • Range: 1,870 km (1,160 mi, 1,010 nmi)
  • Ferry range: 3,102 km (1,927 mi, 1,675 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 10,000 m (33,000 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 15.7 m/s (3,090 ft/min)
  • Time to altitude: 6,000 m (20,000 ft) in 7 minutes 27 seconds
  • Wing loading: 107.4 kg/m2 (22.0 lb/sq ft)
  • Power/mass: 0.254 kW/kg (0.155 hp/lb)

Armament

Notable appearances in media

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References

Notes

  1. ^ Replica/reconstruction, see Surviving aircraft
  2. ^ Note: In Japanese service carrier fighter units were referred to as Kanjō sentōkitai. The Japanese "Zero" was one of the main aircraft(s)used in The attack on Pearl Harbor.

Citations

  1. ^ Hawks, Chuck. "The Best Fighter Planes of World War II". chuckhawks.com. Retrieved: 18 January 2007.
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  3. ^ a b Thompson with Smith 2008, p. 231.
  4. ^ Mersky, Peter B. (Cmdr. USNR). "Time of the Aces: Marine Pilots in the Solomons, 1942–1944." ibiblio.org. Retrieved: 18 January 2007.
  5. ^ Willmott 1980, pp. 40–41.
  6. ^ Angelucci and Matricardi 1978, p. 138.
  7. ^ Young, Edward M. (2013). F4F Wildcat vs A6M Zero-Sen: Pacific Theater 1942. Oxford, Great Britain: Osprey. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-78096-322-8.
  8. ^ a b c d Francillon 1970, pp. 363–364.
  9. ^ Yoshio, Baba."Extra super duralumin and successive aluminum alloys for aircraft." Journal of Japan Institute of Light Metals (Sumitomo Light Metal Ind. Ltd., Japan), Volume 39, Issue 5, pp. 378–395. Retrieved: 22 November 2015.
  10. ^ Tillman 1979, pp. 5, 6, 96.
  11. ^ Yoshimura 1996, p. 108.
  12. ^ Parshall and Tully 2007, p. 79.
  13. ^ a b c d Matricardi 2006, p. 88.
  14. ^ Chen, C. Peter. "Gao Youxin". WW2DB. Retrieved 3 December 2020. 27 Japanese G3M bombers, escorted by 13 A6M Zero fighters, attacked Chongqing, China; the Chinese scrambled nine I-16 and 25 I-15bis fighters (total of 34). At least three A6M Zero fighters were damaged in this engagement, at least one of which was credited to future-ace Lieutenant Gao Youxin in an I-15bis fighter.
  15. ^ Gustavsson, Hakans. "Chinese biplane fighter aces - 'Clifford' 'Long Legged' Louie Yim-Qun". Biplane Fighter Aces - China. Retrieved 3 December 2020. Without radios, they could not communicate with one another... Maj. Cheng Hsiao-Yu led the entire 22nd PS into battle... nine I-15bis from the 28th PS led by Maj. Louie Yim-Qun engaged the Zeros over Chungking... Japanese Zeroes with their high speed, amazing climbing ability, agility and firepower, totally dominated the fight. After half an hour's battle most of the surviving Chinese planes were low on fuel... this battle was debut of the Zero fighter and the Chinese Air Force suffered its worst defeat... Maj. Louie Yim-Qun was one of the injured in the fight... landed his badly shot up I-15bis at Suining and counted 48 bullet holes on it. At least two pilots from 21st PS were killed... one more aircraft was hit, making a forced landing, the wounded pilot suffering a leg shot off, and later dying from loss of blood... of the pilots that survived... Hsu Hwa-Jiang who later in the war continued to fly with the CACW.
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  • Ford, Douglas. "Informing Airmen? The U.S. Army Air Forces' Intelligence on Japanese Fighter Tactics in the Pacific Theatre, 1941–5," International History Review 34 (Dec. 2012), 725–52.
  • Francillon, R.J. Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War. London: Putnam, 1970, ISBN 0-370-00033-1.
  • Glancey, Jonathan. Spitfire: The Illustrated Biography. London: Atlantic Books, 2006. ISBN 978-1-84354-528-6.
  • Green, William and Gordon Swanborough. The Great Book of Fighters. St. Paul, Minnesota: MBI Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-1194-3.
  • Gunston, Bill. Aircraft of World War 2. London: Octopus Books Limited, 1980. ISBN 0-7064-1287-7.
  • Holmes, Tony, ed. Dogfight, The Greatest Air Duels of World War II. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84908-482-6.
  • Huggins, Mark (January–February 2004). "Hunters over Tokyo: The JNAF's Air Defence of Japan 1944–1945". Air Enthusiast (109): 66–71. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Jablonski, Edward. Airwar. New York: Doubleday & Co., 1979. ISBN 0-385-14279-X.
  • James, Derek N. Gloster Aircraft since 1917. London: Putnam and Company Ltd., 1987. ISBN 0-85177-807-0.
  • Lundstrom, John B. The First Team and the Guadalcanal Campaign. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1994. ISBN 1-55750-526-8.
  • Matricardi, Paolo. Aerei Militari. Caccia e Ricognitori (in Italian). Milan: Mondadori Electa, 2006.
  • Mikesh, Robert C. Warbird History: Zero, Combat & Development History of Japan's Legendary Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter. St. Paul, Minnesota: Motorbooks International, 1994. ISBN 0-87938-915-X.
  • Mikesh, Robert C. Zero Fighter. New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1981; copyright Zokeisha Publications, Tokyo. ISBN 0-517-54260-9.
  • Okumiya, Masatake and Jiro Horikoshi, with Martin Caidin. Zero! New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1956.
  • Nijboer, Donald. Seafire Vs A6M Zero: Pacific Theatre. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2009. ISBN 978-1-8460-3433-6.
  • Nohara, Shigeru. Aero Detail 7: Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter. Tokyo: Dai-Nippon Kaiga Co. Ltd, 1993. ISBN 4-499-22608-2.
  • Parshall, Jonathan and Anthony Tully. Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books Inc., 2007. ISBN 978-1-57488-924-6 (paperback).
  • "Plane Facts: Zero-sen ancestry". Air International, October 1973, Vol 3 No 4. pp. 199–200.
  • Smith, Peter C.Mitsubishi Zero: Japan's Legendary Fighter. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK: Pen & Sword Books, 2015. ISBN 978-1-7815-9319-6.
  • Soumille, Jean-Claude (September 1999). "Les avions japonais aux couleurs françaises" [Japanese Aircraft in French Colors]. Avions: Toute l'aéronautique et son histoire (in French) (78): 6–17. ISSN 1243-8650.
  • Spick, Mike. Allied Fighter Aces of World War II. London: Greenhill Books, 1997. ISBN 1-85367-282-3.
  • Stille, Mark. Guadalcanal 1942–43: Japan's bid to knock out Henderson Field and the Cactus Air Force (Air Campaign). Osprey Publishing, 2019. ISBN 1472835514.
  • Thompson, J. Steve with Peter C. Smith. Air Combat Manoeuvres: The Technique and History of Air Fighting for Flight Simulation. Hersham, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan Publishing, 2008. ISBN 978-1-903223-98-7.
  • Thruelsen, Richard. The Grumman Story. Praeger Press, 1976. ISBN 0-275-54260-2.
  • Tillman, Barrett. Hellcat: The F6F in World War II. Naval Institute Press, 1979. ISBN 1-55750-991-3.
  • United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. Corporation Report I, Washington, D.C. 1947.
  • United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division. Nakajima Aircraft Company, Ltd. Corporation Report II, Washington, D.C. 1947.
  • United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division. Hitachi Aircraft Company, Ltd. Corporation Report VII, Washington, D.C. 1947.
  • United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division. Army Air Arsenal and Navy Air Depots Corporation Report XIX, Washington, D.C. 1947.
  • Wilcox, Richard. "The Zero: The first famed Japanese fighter captured intact reveals its secrets to U.S. Navy aerial experts". Life, 4 November 1942.
  • Willmott, H.P. Zero A6M. London: Bison Books, 1980. ISBN 0-89009-322-9.
  • Yoshimura, Akira, translated by Retsu Kaiho and Michael Gregson. Zero Fighter. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers, 1996. ISBN 0-275-95355-6.
  • Young, Edward M. F4F Wildcat vs A6M Zero-sen. Oxford, UK: Osprey, 2013. ISBN 978-1-7809-6322-8.

Further reading

  • Bueschel, Richard M. Mitsubishi A6M1/2/-2N Zero-Sen in Imperial Japanese Naval Air Service. Canterbury, Kent, UK: Osprey Publications Ltd., 1970. ISBN 0-85045-018-7.
  • Francillon, René J. The Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero-Sen (Aircraft in Profile number 129). Leatherhead, Surrey, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1966.
  • Francillon, René J. The Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero-Sen ("Hamp") (Aircraft in Profile number 190). Leatherhead, Surrey, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1967.
  • Jackson, Robert. Combat Legend: Mitsubishi Zero. Ramsbury, Marlborough, Wiltshire, UK: Airlife Publishing, 2003. ISBN 1-84037-398-9.
  • Juszczak, Artur. Mitsubishi A6M Zero. Tarnobrzeg, Poland/Redbourn, UK: Mushroom Model Publications, 2001. ISBN 83-7300-085-2.
  • Kinzey, Bert. Attack on Pearl Harbor: Japan awakens a Sleeping Giant. Blacksburg, Virginia, USA: Military Aviation Archives, 2010. ISBN 978-0-9844665-0-4.
  • Marchand, Patrick and Junko Takamori. (Illustrator). A6M Zero (Les Ailes de Gloire 2) (in French). Le Muy, France: Editions d’Along, 2000. ISBN 2-914403-02-X.
  • Mikesh, Robert C. and Rikyu Watanabe (Illustrator). Zero Fighter. London: Jane's Publishing Company Ltd., 1981. ISBN 0-7106-0037-2.
  • Nohara, Shigeru. A6M Zero in Action (Aircraft #59). Carrollton, Texas, USA: Squadron/Signal Publications, Inc., 1983. ISBN 0-89747-141-5.
  • Nohara, Shigeru. Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter (Aero Detail 7) (in Japanese with English captions). Tokyo, Japan: Dai Nippon Kaiga Company Ltd., 1993. ISBN 4-499-22608-2.
  • Okumiya, Masatake and Jiro Horikoshi (with Martin Caidin, ed.). Zero! The Story of Japan's Air War in the Pacific: 1941–45. New York: Ballantine Books, 1956. No ISBN.
  • "Plane Facts: Zero-sen ancestry". Air International, Vol. 3, No. 4, October 1973, pp. 199–200.
  • Richards, M.C. and Donald S. Smith. Mitsubishi A6M5 to A6M8 'Zero-Sen' ('Zeke 52')(Aircraft in Profile number 236). Windsor, Berkshire, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1972.
  • Sakaida, Henry. Imperial Japanese Navy Aces, 1937–45. Botley, Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing Ltd., 1998. ISBN 1-85532-727-9.
  • Sakaida, Henry. The Siege of Rabaul. St. Paul, Minnesota: Phalanx Publishing, 1996. ISBN 1-883809-09-6.
  • Sheftall, M.G. Blossoms in the Wind: Human Legacies of the Kamikaze. New York: NAL Caliber, 2005. ISBN 0-451-21487-0.
  • Wilson, Stewart. Zero, Hurricane & P-38, The Story of Three Classic Fighters of WW2 (Legends of the Air 4). Fyshwick, Australia: Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd., 1996. ISBN 1-875671-24-2.

External links

  •   Media related to Mitsubishi A6M Zero at Wikimedia Commons
  • Tour A6M5 Zero cockpit
  • Mitsubishi A6M Zero Japanese fighter aircraft—design, construction, history
  • WW2DB: A6M Zero
  • www.j-aircraft.com: Quotes A6M
  • Mitsubishi A6M Reisen (Zero Fighter), Joao Paulo Julião Matsuura
  • Mitsubishi A6M2-K and A6M5-K, Joao Paulo Julião Matsuura
  • Nakajima A6M2-N, Joao Paulo Julião Matsuura
Video links
  • Planes of Fame "61-120" A6M5 Zero Flight Video on YouTube
  • Warren Pietsch, Texas Flying Legends Museum, A6M2 Model 21 Zero "Last Samurai" – Museum Secrets on YouTube
  • Warren Pietsch, Texas Flying Legends Museum, A6M2 Model 21 Zero "Last Samurai" – Aerobatic Airshow on YouTube

mitsubishi, zero, mitsubishi, zero, long, range, carrier, based, fighter, aircraft, formerly, manufactured, mitsubishi, aircraft, company, part, mitsubishi, heavy, industries, operated, imperial, japanese, navy, from, 1940, 1945, designated, mitsubishi, navy, . The Mitsubishi A6M Zero is a long range carrier based fighter aircraft formerly manufactured by Mitsubishi Aircraft Company a part of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and was operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy from 1940 to 1945 The A6M was designated as the Mitsubishi Navy Type 0 carrier fighter 零式艦上戦闘機 rei shiki kanjō sentōki or the Mitsubishi A6M Rei sen The A6M was usually referred to by its pilots as the Reisen 零戦 zero fighter 0 being the last digit of the imperial year 2600 1940 when it entered service with the Imperial Navy The official Allied reporting name was Zeke although the name Zero from Type 0 was used colloquially as well A6M Zero A6M3 Model 22 N712Z operated by the Commemorative Air Force So Cal Wing Note 1 Role Carrier based fighter aircraftNational origin JapanManufacturer Mitsubishi Heavy IndustriesFirst flight 1 April 1939Introduction 1 July 1940Retired 1945 Japan Primary user Imperial Japanese Navy Air ServiceProduced 1939 1945Number built 10 939Developed from Mitsubishi A5MVariants Nakajima A6M2 NDeveloped into Mitsubishi A7MThe Zero is considered to have been the most capable carrier based fighter in the world when it was introduced early in World War II combining excellent maneuverability and very long range 1 The Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service IJNAS also frequently used it as a land based fighter In early combat operations the Zero gained a reputation as a dogfighter 2 achieving an outstanding kill ratio of 12 to 1 3 but by mid 1942 a combination of new tactics and the introduction of better equipment enabled Allied pilots to engage the Zero on generally equal terms 4 By 1943 the Zero was less effective against newer Allied fighters due to design limitations It lacked hydraulic boosting for its ailerons and rudder rendering it extremely difficult to maneuver at high speeds By 1944 with Allied fighters approaching the A6M levels of maneuverability and consistently exceeding its firepower armor and speed the A6M had largely become outdated as a fighter aircraft However as design delays and production difficulties hampered the introduction of newer Japanese aircraft models the Zero continued to serve in a front line role until the end of the war in the Pacific During the final phases it was also adapted for use in kamikaze operations 5 Japan produced more Zeros than any other model of combat aircraft during the war 6 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Name 2 Operational history 2 1 Allied analysis 2 1 1 Chinese opinions 2 1 2 American opinions 2 1 3 British opinions 3 Variants 3 1 A6M1 Type 0 Prototypes 3 2 A6M2a Type 0 Model 11 3 3 A6M2b Type 0 Model 21 3 4 A6M3 Type 0 Model 32 3 5 A6M3 Type 0 Model 22 3 6 A6M4 Type 0 Model 41 42 3 7 A6M5 Type 0 Model 52 3 8 A6M6 Type 0 Model 53 3 9 A6M7 Type 0 Model 62 63 3 10 A6M8 Type 0 Model 64 4 Production 4 1 Trainer 4 2 Total production 5 Operators 6 Surviving aircraft 6 1 Australia 6 2 China 6 3 Germany 6 4 Indonesia 6 5 Japan 6 6 New Zealand 6 7 United Kingdom 6 8 United States 7 Specifications A6M2 Type 0 Model 21 8 Notable appearances in media 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 10 3 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksDesign and development EditThe Mitsubishi A5M fighter was just entering service in early 1937 when the Imperial Japanese Navy IJN started looking for its eventual replacement On 5 October 1937 it issued Planning Requirements for the Prototype 12 shi Carrier based Fighter sending them to Nakajima and Mitsubishi Both firms started preliminary design work while awaiting more definitive requirements a few months later 7 Based on the experiences of the A5M in China the IJN sent out updated requirements in October calling for a speed of 270 kn 310 mph 500 km h at 4 000 m 13 000 ft and a climb to 3 000 m 9 800 ft in 9 5 minutes With drop tanks the Navy wanted an endurance of two hours at normal power or six to eight hours at economical cruising speed Armament was to consist of two 20 mm cannons two 7 7 mm 303 in machine guns and two 60 kg 130 lb bombs A complete radio set was to be mounted in all aircraft along with a radio direction finder for long range navigation 8 The maneuverability was to be at least equal to that of the A5M while the wingspan had to be less than 12 m 39 ft to allow for use on aircraft carriers Nakajima s team considered the new requirements unachievable and pulled out of the competition in January Mitsubishi s chief designer Jiro Horikoshi thought that the requirements could be met but only if the aircraft were made as light as possible Every possible weight saving measure was incorporated into the design Most of the aircraft was built of a new top secret aluminium alloy developed by Sumitomo Metal Industries in 1936 Called extra super duralumin ESD it was lighter stronger and more ductile than other alloys e g 24S alloy used at the time but was prone to corrosive attack which made it brittle 9 This detrimental effect was countered with an anti corrosion coating applied after fabrication No armour protection was provided for the pilot engine or other critical points of the aircraft and self sealing fuel tanks which were becoming common among other combatants were not used This made the Zero lighter more maneuverable and one of the longest ranged single engine fighters of World War II which made it capable of searching out an enemy hundreds of kilometres away bringing it to battle then returning to its base or aircraft carrier However that tradeoff in weight and construction also made it prone to catching fire and exploding when struck by enemy fire 10 With its low wing cantilever monoplane layout retractable wide set conventional landing gear and enclosed cockpit the Zero was one of the most modern carrier based aircraft in the world at the time of its introduction It had a fairly high lift low speed wing with very low wing loading This combined with its light weight resulted in a very low stalling speed of well below 60 kn 110 km h 69 mph This was the main reason for its phenomenal maneuverability allowing it to out turn any Allied fighter of the time Early models were fitted with servo tabs on the ailerons after pilots complained that control forces became too heavy at speeds above 300 kilometres per hour 190 mph They were discontinued on later models after it was found that the lightened control forces were causing pilots to overstress the wings during vigorous maneuvers 11 Name Edit See also World War II Allied names for Japanese aircraft The A6M is usually known as the Zero from its Japanese Navy type designation Type 0 carrier fighter Rei shiki Kanjō sentōki 零式艦上戦闘機 taken from the last digit of the Imperial year 2600 1940 when it entered service In Japan it was unofficially referred to as both Rei sen and Zero sen Japanese pilots most commonly called it Zero sen where sen is the first syllable of sentōki Japanese for fighter plane Note 2 12 In the official designation A6M the A signified a carrier based fighter 6 meant that it was the sixth such model built for the Imperial Navy and M indicated Mitsubishi as the manufacturer The official Allied code name was Zeke in keeping with the practice of giving male names to Japanese fighters female names to bombers bird names to gliders and tree names to trainers Zeke was part of the first batch of hillbilly code names assigned by Captain Frank T McCoy of Nashville Tennessee assigned to the Allied Technical Air Intelligence Unit ATAIU at Eagle Farm Airport in Australia who wanted quick distinctive easy to remember names The Allied code for Japanese aircraft was introduced in 1942 and McCoy chose Zeke for the Zero Later two variants of the fighter received their own code names The Nakajima A6M2 N floatplane version of the Zero was called Rufe and the A6M3 32 variant was initially called Hap General Hap Arnold commander of the USAAF objected to that name however so it was changed to Hamp Operational history Edit Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero Model 21 takes off from the aircraft carrier Akagi to attack Pearl Harbor The cockpit starboard console of an A6M2 which crashed into Building 52 at Fort Kamehameha during the attack on Pearl Harbor killing the pilot Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero wreck abandoned at Munda Airfield Central Solomons 1943 A6M2 Zero photo c 2004 Carrier A6M2 and A6M3 Zeros from the aircraft carrier Zuikaku preparing for a mission at Rabaul A6M3 Model 22 flown by Japanese ace Hiroyoshi Nishizawa over the Solomon Islands 1943 Wrecked A6M Zero in Peleliu jungle The first Zeros pre series of 15 A6M2 went into operation with the 12th Rengo Kōkutai in July 1940 13 On 13 September 1940 the Zeros scored their first air to air victories when 13 A6M2s led by Lieutenant Saburo Shindo escorting 27 G3M Nell medium heavy bombers on a raid of Chunking attacked 34 Soviet built Polikarpov I 15s and I 16s of the Chinese Nationalist Air Force claimed all 27 of the Chinese fighters shot down without loss to themselves however Major Louie Yim qun had in fact nursed his I 15 riddled with 48 bullet holes back to base and Lieutenant Gao Youxin claimed to have shot down one of Lt Shindo s Zeroes but at most 4 Zeroes sustained some damage in the 1 2 hour long dogfight over Chunking 14 15 By the time they were redeployed a year later the Zeros had shot down 99 Chinese aircraft 16 up to 266 according to other sources 13 At the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor 521 Zeros were active in the Pacific 328 in first line units 17 The carrier borne Model 21 was the type encountered by the Americans Its tremendous range of over 2 600 kilometres 1 600 mi allowed it to range farther from its carrier than expected appearing over distant battlefronts and giving Allied commanders the impression that there were several times as many Zeros as actually existed 18 The Zero quickly gained a fearsome reputation 2 Thanks to a combination of unsurpassed maneuverability compared to contemporary Axis fighters and excellent firepower it easily disposed of Allied aircraft sent against it in the Pacific in 1941 19 20 It proved a difficult opponent even for the Supermarine Spitfire The RAF pilots were trained in methods that were excellent against German and Italian equipment but suicide against the acrobatic Japs as Lt Gen Claire Lee Chennault had to notice 21 Although not as fast as the British fighter the Mitsubishi fighter could out turn the Spitfire with ease sustain a climb at a very steep angle and stay in the air for three times as long 22 Allied pilots soon developed tactics to cope with the Zero Due to its extreme agility engaging a Zero in a traditional turning dogfight was likely to be fatal 23 It was better to swoop down from above in a high speed pass fire a quick burst then climb quickly back up to altitude A short burst of fire from heavy machine guns or cannon was often enough to bring down the fragile Zero These tactics were regularly employed by Grumman F4F Wildcat fighters during Guadalcanal defense through high altitude ambush which was possible due to an early warning system consisting of Coastwatchers and radar 24 Such boom and zoom tactics were also successfully used in the China Burma India Theater CBI by the Flying Tigers of the American Volunteer Group AVG against similarly maneuverable Japanese Army aircraft such as the Nakajima Ki 27 Nate and Nakajima Ki 43 Oscar AVG pilots were trained by their commander Claire Chennault to exploit the advantages of their P 40s which were very sturdy heavily armed generally faster in a dive and level flight at low altitude with a good rate of roll 25 Another important maneuver was Lieutenant Commander John S Jimmy Thach s Thach Weave in which two fighters would fly about 60 m 200 ft apart If a Zero latched onto the tail of one of the fighters the two aircraft would turn toward each other If the Zero followed his original target through the turn he would come into a position to be fired on by the target s wingman This tactic was first used to good effect during the Battle of Midway and later over the Solomon Islands Many highly experienced Japanese aviators were lost in combat resulting in a progressive decline in quality which became a significant factor in Allied successes Unexpected heavy losses of pilots at the Battles of the Coral Sea and Midway dealt the Japanese carrier air force a blow from which it never fully recovered 26 27 source source source source source source Short film Recognition of the Japanese Zero Fighter 1943 intended to help U S airmen quickly distinguish the Zero from friendly aircraft with Ronald Reagan as pilot Saunders Throughout the Battle of Midway Allied pilots expressed a high level of dissatisfaction with the F4F Wildcat The Commanding Officer of USS Yorktown noted The fighter pilots are very disappointed with the performance and length of sustained fire power of the F4F 4 airplanes The Zero fighters could easily outmaneuver and out climb the F4F 3 and the consensus of fighter pilot opinion is that the F4F 4 is even more sluggish and slow than the F4F 3 It is also felt that it was a mistake to put 6 guns on the F4F 4 and thus to reduce the rounds per gun Many of our fighters ran out of ammunition even before the Jap dive bombers arrived over our forces these were experienced pilots not novices 28 They were astounded by the Zero s superiority 29 In the Coral Sea they made all their approaches from the rear or high side and did relatively little damage because of our armor It also is desired to call attention to the fact that there was an absence of the fancy stunting during pull outs or approaches for attacks In this battle the Japs dove in made the attack and then immediately pulled out taking advantage of their superior climb and maneuverability In attacking fighters the Zeros usually attacked from above rear at high speed and recovered by climbing vertically until they lost some speed and then pulled on through to complete a small loop of high wing over which placed them out of reach and in position for another attack By reversing the turn sharply after each attack the leader may get a shot at the enemy while he is climbing away or head on into a scissor if the Jap turns to meet it 28 In contrast Allied fighters were designed with ruggedness and pilot protection in mind 30 The Japanese ace Saburō Sakai described how the toughness of early Grumman aircraft was a factor in preventing the Zero from attaining total domination I had full confidence in my ability to destroy the Grumman and decided to finish off the enemy fighter with only my 7 7 mm machine guns I turned the 20mm cannon switch to the off position and closed in For some strange reason even after I had poured about five or six hundred rounds of ammunition directly into the Grumman the airplane did not fall but kept on flying I thought this very odd it had never happened before and closed the distance between the two airplanes until I could almost reach out and touch the Grumman To my surprise the Grumman s rudder and tail were torn to shreds looking like an old torn piece of rag With his plane in such condition no wonder the pilot was unable to continue fighting A Zero which had taken that many bullets would have been a ball of fire by now 31 When the powerfully armed Lockheed P 38 Lightning armed with four light barrel AN M2 50 cal Browning machine guns and one 20 mm autocannon and the Grumman F6F Hellcat and Vought F4U Corsair each with six AN M2 50 calibre Browning guns appeared in the Pacific theater the A6M with its low powered engine and lighter armament was hard pressed to remain competitive In combat with an F6F or F4U the only positive thing that could be said of the Zero at this stage of the war was that in the hands of a skillful pilot it could maneuver as well as most of its opponents 18 Nonetheless in competent hands the Zero could still be deadly Due to shortages of high powered aviation engines and problems with planned successor models namely the superior Mitsubishi A7M2 Reppu the Zero remained in production until 1945 with over 10 000 of all variants produced Allied analysis Edit Chinese opinions Edit The Japanese deployed the A6M during the Second Sino Japanese War Inevitably some machines were lost with at least two falling more or less intact into Chinese hands The first known example an A6M2 the 12th of the 15th pre production aircraft Serial V 110 fell near Fainan Island On 18 September 1940 a team including Western volunteers assisting the Chinese examined the wreck It was largely intact and a detail report was compiled and sent to the USA The second an A6M2 21 Serial V 173 made a forced landing near Tietsan airfield 17 February 1941 The pilot was shot before he could destroy his plane the fuel system fixed and it was taken into Chinese service with the serial P5016 The aeroplane was extensively flown amp studied by a team which included Gerhard Neumann and a detailed amp illustrated report was sent to Washington Overall they were impressed with the quality of the machine less so by the performance although this was later put down to using 85 octane fuel rather than the 100 octane required by the Sakae engine 32 American opinions Edit The American military discovered many of the A6M s unique attributes when they recovered a largely intact specimen of an A6M2 the Akutan Zero on Akutan Island in the Aleutians During an air raid over Dutch Harbor on 4 June 1942 one A6M fighter was hit by ground based anti aircraft fire Losing oil Flight Petty Officer Tadayoshi Koga attempted an emergency landing on Akutan Island about 20 miles 32 km northeast of Dutch Harbor but his Zero flipped over on soft ground in a sudden crash landing Koga died instantly of head injuries his neck was broken by the tremendous impact but his wingmen hoped he had survived and so went against Japanese doctrine to destroy disabled Zeros 33 The relatively undamaged fighter was found over a month later by an American salvage team and was shipped to Naval Air Station North Island where testing flights of the repaired A6M revealed both strengths and deficiencies in design and performance 30 34 The experts who evaluated the captured Zero found that the plane weighed about 2 360 kg 5 200 lb fully loaded some 1 260 kg 2 780 lb lighter than the F4F Wildcat the standard United States Navy fighter of the time The A6M s airframe was built like a fine watch the Zero was constructed with flush rivets and even the guns were flush with the wings The instrument panel was a marvel of simplicity with no superfluities to distract the pilot What most impressed the experts was that the Zero s fuselage and wings were constructed in one piece unlike the American method that built them separately and joined the two parts together The Japanese method was much slower but resulted in a very strong structure and improved close maneuverability 30 American test pilots found that the Zero s controls were very light at 320 km h 200 mph but stiffened at faster speeds above 348 km h 216 mph to safeguard against wing failure 35 The Zero could not keep up with Allied aircraft in high speed maneuvers and its low never exceed speed VNE made it vulnerable in a dive Testing also revealed that the Zero could not roll as quickly to the right as it could to the left which could be exploited 33 While stable on the ground despite its light weight the aircraft was designed purely for the attack role emphasizing long range maneuverability and firepower at the expense of protection of its pilot Most lacked self sealing tanks and armor plating 30 British opinions Edit Captain Eric Brown the Chief Naval Test Pilot of the Royal Navy recalled being impressed by the Zero during tests of captured aircraft I don t think I have ever flown a fighter that could match the rate of turn of the Zero The Zero had ruled the roost totally and was the finest fighter in the world until mid 1943 3 Variants Edit A6M1 Type 0 Prototypes Edit The first two A6M1 prototypes were completed in March 1939 powered by the 580 kW 780 hp Mitsubishi Zuisei 13 engine with a two blade propeller It first flew on 1 April and passed testing within a remarkably short period By September it had already been accepted for Navy testing as the A6M1 Type 0 Carrier Fighter with the only notable change being a switch to a three bladed propeller to cure a vibration problem A6M2a Type 0 Model 11 Edit Two Zeros over China While the Navy was testing the first two prototypes they suggested that the third be fitted with the 700 kW 940 hp Nakajima Sakae 12 engine instead Mitsubishi had its own engine of this class in the form of the Kinsei so they were somewhat reluctant to use the Sakae Nevertheless when the first A6M2 was completed in January 1940 the Sakae s extra power pushed the performance of the Zero well past the original specifications The new version was so promising that the Navy had 15 built and shipped to China before they had completed testing They arrived in Manchuria in July 1940 and first saw combat over Chungking in August There they proved to be completely untouchable by the Polikarpov I 16s and I 153s that had been such a problem for the A5Ms when in service In one encounter 13 Zeros shot down 27 I 15s and I 16s in under three minutes without loss After hearing of these reports the Navy immediately ordered the A6M2 into production as the Type 0 Carrier Fighter Model 11 Reports of the Zero s performance slowly filtered back to the US They by most US military officials who thought it impossible for the Japanese to build such an aircraft A6M2b Type 0 Model 21 Edit A6M2 Zero Model 21 of Shōkaku prior to attack on Pearl Harbor 7 December 1941 After the delivery of the 65th aircraft a further change was worked into the production lines which introduced folding wingtips to allow them to fit on aircraft carriers 17 The resulting Model 21 would become one of the most produced versions early in the war A feature was the improved range with 520 L 140 US gal wing tank and 320 L 85 US gal drop tank When the lines switched to updated models 740 Model 21s had been completed by Mitsubishi and another 800 by Nakajima Two other versions of the Model 21 were built in small numbers the Nakajima built A6M2 N Rufe floatplane based on the Model 11 with a slightly modified tail and the A6M2 K two seat trainer of which a total of 508 were built by Hitachi and the Sasebo Naval Air Arsenal 36 A6M3 Type 0 Model 32 Edit A6M3 Model 32 In 1941 Nakajima introduced the Sakae 21 engine which used a two speed supercharger for better altitude performance and increased power to 840 kW 1 130 hp A prototype Zero with the new engine was first flown on 15 July 1941 37 The new Sakae was slightly heavier and somewhat longer due to the larger supercharger which moved the center of gravity too far forward on the existing airframe To correct for this the engine mountings were cut back by 185 mm 7 3 in to move the engine toward the cockpit This had the side effect of reducing the size of the main fuselage fuel tank located between the engine and the cockpit from 518 L 137 US gal to 470 L 120 US gal The cowling was redesigned to enlarge the cowl flaps revise the oil cooler air intake and move the carburetor air intake to the upper half of the cowling 38 39 The wings were redesigned to reduce span eliminate the folding tips and square off the wingtips The inboard edge of the aileron was moved outboard by one rib and the wing fuel tanks were enlarged accordingly to 420 L 110 US gal The two 20 mm wing cannon were upgraded from the Type 99 Mark l to the Mark II 38 which required a bulge in the sheet metal of the wing below each cannon The wings also included larger ammunition boxes and thus allowing 100 rounds per cannon The Sakae 21 engine and other changes increased maximum speed by only 11 km h 6 8 mph compared to the Model 21 but sacrificed nearly 1 000 km 620 mi of range 37 Nevertheless the navy accepted the type and it entered production in April 1942 40 The shorter wingspan led to better roll and the reduced drag allowed the diving speed to be increased to 670 km h 420 mph On the downside turning and range which were the strengths of the Model 21 suffered due to smaller ailerons decreased lift and greater fuel consumption The shorter range proved a significant limitation during the Solomons Campaign during which Zeros based at Rabaul had to travel nearly to their maximum range to reach Guadalcanal and return 41 Consequently the Model 32 was unsuited to that campaign 40 and was used mainly for shorter range offensive missions and interception This variant was flown by only a small number of units and only 343 were built A6M3 Type 0 Model 22 Edit In order to correct the deficiencies of the Model 32 a new version with folding wingtips and redesigned wing was introduced The fuel tanks were moved to the outer wings fuel lines for a 330 L 87 US gal drop tank were installed under each wing and the internal fuel capacity was increased to 570 L 150 US gal More importantly it regained its capabilities for long operating ranges similar to the previous A6M2 Model 21 which was vastly shortened by the Model 32 However before the new design type was accepted formally by the Navy the A6M3 Model 22 already stood ready for service in December 1942 Approximately 560 aircraft of the new type had been produced in the meantime by Mitsubishi Jukogyo K K 42 According to a theory the very late production Model 22 might have had wings similar to the shortened rounded tip wing of the Model 52 43 One plane of such arrangement was photographed at Lakunai Airfield Rabaul East in the second half of 1943 and has been published widely in a number of Japanese books While the engine cowling is the same of previous Model 32 and 22 the theory proposes that the plane is an early production Model 52 44 The Model 32 22 22 kou 52 52 kou and 52 otsu were all powered by the Nakajima 栄 Sakae 21型 engine 41 That engine kept its designation in spite of changes in the exhaust system for the Model 52 A6M4 Type 0 Model 41 42 Edit Mitsubishi is unable to state with certainty that it ever used the designation A6M4 or model numbers for it However A6M4 does appear in a translation of a captured Japanese memo from a Naval Air Technical Arsenal titled Quarterly Report on Research Experiments dated 1 October 1942 45 It mentions a cross section of the A6M4 intercooler then being designed Some researchers believe A6M4 was applied to one or two prototype planes fitted with an experimental turbo supercharged Sakae engine designed for high altitude 46 Mitsubishi s involvement in the project was probably quite limited or nil the unmodified Sakae engine was made by Nakajima 41 The design and testing of the turbo supercharger was the responsibility of the First Naval Air Technical Arsenal 第一海軍航空廠 Dai Ichi Kaigun Kōkushō at Yokosuka 45 At least one photo of a prototype plane exists It shows a turbo unit mounted in the forward left fuselage Lack of suitable alloys for use in the manufacture of a turbo supercharger and its related ducting caused numerous ruptures resulting in fires and poor performance Consequently further development of a turbo supercharged A6M was cancelled The lack of acceptance by the Navy suggests that it did not bestow model number 41 or 42 formally although it appears that the arsenal did use the designation A6M4 The prototype engines nevertheless provided useful experience for future engine designs 47 A6M5 Type 0 Model 52 Edit Mitsubishi A6M5 Model 52s among other aircraft types abandoned by the Japanese at the end of the war Atsugi Naval Air Base and captured by US forces A6M5c Zeros preparing to take part in a kamikaze attack in early 1945 Sometimes considered as the most effective variant 48 the Model 52 was developed to again shorten the wings to increase speed and dispense with the folding wing mechanism In addition ailerons aileron trim tab and flaps were revised 49 50 Produced first by Mitsubishi most Model 52s were made by Nakajima The prototype was made in June 1943 by modifying an A6M3 and was first flown in August 1943 51 The first Model 52 is said in the handling manual 52 to have production number 3904 53 which apparently refers to the prototype Research by Mr Bunzo Komine published by Mr Kenji Miyazaki states that aircraft 3904 through 4103 had the same exhaust system and cowl flaps as on the Model 22 54 This is partially corroborated by two wrecks researched by Mr Stan Gajda and Mr L G Halls production number 4007 and 4043 respectively 55 verification needed 56 verification needed 57 verification needed The upper cowling was slightly redesigned from that of the Model 22 38 An early production A6M5 Zero with non separated exhaust with an A6M3 Model 22 in the background A new exhaust system provided an increment of thrust by aiming the stacks aft and distributing them around the forward fuselage The new exhaust system required notched cowl flaps and heat shields just aft of the stacks Note however that the handling manual translation states that the new style of exhaust commenced with number 3904 Whether this is correct indicates retrofitting intentions refers to the prototype but not to all subsequent planes or is in error is unclear From production number 4274 the wing fuel tanks received carbon dioxide fire extinguishers 58 59 From number 4354 the radio became the Model 3 aerial Mark 1 and at that point it is said the antenna mast was shortened slightly 60 Through production number 4550 the lowest exhaust stacks were approximately the same length as those immediately above them This caused hot exhaust to burn the forward edge of the landing gear doors and heat the tires Therefore from number 4551 Mitsubishi began to install shorter bottom stacks 61 Nakajima manufactured the Model 52 at its Koizumi plant in Gunma Prefecture 62 The A6M5 had a maximum speed of 565 km h 351 mph at 6 000 m 20 000 ft reaching that altitude in 7 01 minutes 63 Subsequent variants included A6M5a Model 52甲 Kō 52a Starting at Mitsubishi number 4651 an armament change substituted the belt fed Type 99 2 Mark 4 cannon with 125 rounds per gun in place of the drum fed Type 99 2 Mark 3 cannon that carried 100 rounds per gun Hence the bulge in the underside of the wing for each cannon s ammunition drum was deleted and the ejection port for spent cartridge cases was moved Thicker wing skinning was installed to permit higher diving speeds 64 A6M5b Model 52乙 Otsu 52b Armament change The 7 7 mm 303 in Type 97 gun 750 m s 2 500 ft s muzzle velocity and 600 m 2 000 ft range in the right forward fuselage was replaced by a 13 2 mm Type 3 Browning derived gun 790 m s 2 600 ft s muzzle velocity and 900 m 3 000 ft range with a rate of fire of 800 rounds per minute with 240 rounds The larger weapon required an enlarged opening creating a distinctive asymmetric appearance to the top of the cowling and a revised gas outlet near the windscreen In addition each wing cannon received a fairing at the wing leading edge A plate of armored glass 45 mm 1 8 in thick was fitted to the windscreen A larger propeller spinner was fitted suggesting a change to the propeller 65 The type of ventral drop tank was changed it now had fins and was suspended on a slanted pipe The first of this variant was completed in April 1944 and it was produced until October 1944 66 A6M5c Model 52丙 Hei 52c Armament change One 13 2 mm 51 in Type 3 machine gun was added in each wing outboard of the cannon and the 7 7 mm gun on the left side of the cowl was deleted Four racks for rockets or small bombs were installed outboard of the 13 mm gun in each wing Engine change Some sources state that the hei had a Sakae 31 engine 67 In addition a 55 mm 2 2 in thick piece of armored glass was installed at the headrest and an 8 mm 0 31 in thick plate of armor was installed behind the seat The mounting of the central 300 L 79 US gal drop tank changed to a four post design 68 Wing skin was thickened further The first of this variant was completed in September 1944 64 Because of the gain in weight this variant was used mainly for intercepting B 29s and special attack 69 A6M5 S A6M5 Yakan Sentōki Armament change To intercept B 29s and other night flying aircraft an air arsenal converted some Model 52s to night fighters 70 They were armed with one 20 mm Type 99 cannon behind the pilot aimed upward similar in intent to the Luftwaffe s Schrage Musik installation 71 However lack of radar prevented them from being very effective Some Model 21 and 52 aircraft were converted to bakusen fighter bombers by mounting a bomb rack and 250 kg 550 lb bomb in place of the centerline drop tank Up to seven Model 52 planes were ostensibly converted into A6M5 K two seat trainers 36 Mass production was contemplated by Hitachi but not undertaken 72 A6M6 Type 0 Model 53 Edit The A6M6 was developed to use the Sakae 31a engine featuring water methanol engine boost and self sealing wing tanks 73 74 During preliminary testing its performance was considered unsatisfactory due to the additional engine power failing to materialize and the unreliability of the fuel injection system 75 76 Testing continued on the A6M6 but the end of war stopped further development Only one prototype was produced A6M7 Type 0 Model 62 63 Edit The A6M7 was the last variant to see service It was designed to meet a requirement by the Navy for a dedicated attack dive bomber version that could operate from smaller aircraft carriers 8 or according to another source replace the obsolete Aichi D3A 77 The A6M7 had considerable design changes compared to previous attempts to make the A6M suitable for dive bombing This included a reinforced vertical stabilizer a special bomb rack provision of two 350 litre drop tanks and fixed bomb rocket swing stoppers on the underside of the wings 78 79 80 77 8 It was also given a new powerplant the Sakae 31 engine producing 1 130 hp on take off The A6M7 had a similar armament layout to the A6M5c with the exception of the bomb centreline bomb rack capable of carrying 250 kg or 500 kg bombs Entering production in May 1945 8 78 80 79 the A6M7 was also used for Kamikaze attacks 81 82 A6M8 Type 0 Model 64 Edit A6M8 Type 64 one of two prototypes being tested by US Forces at Misawa Air Base Similar to the A6M6 but with the Sakae now out of production replaced by the Mitsubishi Kinsei 62 engine with 1 163 kW 1 560 hp 60 more powerful than the A6M2 s engine 13 This resulted in an extensively modified cowling and nose for the aircraft The carburetor intake was much larger a long duct like that on the Nakajima B6N Tenzan was added and a large spinner like that on the Yokosuka D4Y Suisei with the Kinsei 62 was mounted The armament consisted of two 13 2 mm 52 in Type 3 machine guns and two 20 mm 80 in Type 99 cannons in the wings In addition the Model 64 was modified to carry two 150 l 40 US gal drop tanks on either wing in order to permit the mounting of a 250 kg 550 lb bomb on the underside of the fuselage Two prototypes were completed in April 1945 but the chaotic situation of Japanese industry and the end of the war obstructed the start of the ambitious program of production for 6 300 A6M8s only the two prototypes being completed and flown 13 83 Production EditA6M Production Nagoya Mitsubishi Jukogyo K K 84 Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual1939 1 1 1 31940 1 1 1 1 4 3 9 8 9 19 23 19 981941 23 23 30 27 30 26 25 30 33 43 52 60 4021942 60 58 55 54 58 45 46 51 64 65 67 69 6921943 68 69 73 73 73 73 77 85 93 105 110 130 1 0291944 125 115 105 109 95 100 115 135 135 145 115 62 1 3561945 35 59 40 37 38 23 15 52 299Total 3 879Not included A second A6M1 was completed on 17 March 1939 85 but was written off without explanation after completing the company s flight test program in July 1940 86 A6M Production Ota Nakajima Hikoki K K 87 Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual1941 1 6 71942 19 22 35 31 36 34 52 65 75 88 99 118 6741943 110 119 133 144 148 152 153 156 243 182 202 225 1 9671944 238 154 271 230 232 200 163 232 245 194 109 206 2 4741945 216 108 207 230 247 185 138 85 1 416Total 6 538Trainer Edit A6M Trainer Production Chiba Hitachi Kokuki K K 88 and Omura Dai Nijuichi K K 89 Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual1943 4 5 6 8 8 8 10 10 10 12 12 15 1101944 12 16 17 18 17 23 30 29 15 23 27 25 2521945 23 8 34 21 31 23 15 155Total 517Total production Edit According to USSBS Report 10 934 includes 10 094 A6M 323 A6M2 N and 517 A6M K builds According to Francillon 11 291 includes 10 449 A6M 90 327 A6M2 N 91 508 A6M2 K and 7 A6M5 K builds 36 Operators EditMain article List of Mitsubishi A6M Zero operators JapanImperial Japanese Navy Air ServiceSurviving aircraft Edit A6M2 Model 21 on display at the Pacific Aviation Museum Pearl Harbor Hawaii United States This aircraft was made airworthy in the early 1980s before being grounded in 2002 92 A6M5 on display at the National Air and Space Museum United States A6M5 on display at Yushukan in Tokyo Japan A6M on display at the National Museum of Nature and Science Japan An A6M at the National Museum of the USAF painted to represent a section leader s aircraft from the Japanese aircraft carrier Zuihō during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea 93 2017 Red Bull Air Race of Chiba N553TT Like many surviving World War II Japanese aircraft most surviving Zeros are made up of parts from multiple airframes As a result some are referred to by conflicting manufacturer serial numbers Other planes such as those recovered after decades in a wrecked condition have been reconstructed to the extent that the majority of their structure is made up of modern parts All of this means the identities of surviving aircraft can be difficult to confirm Most flying Zeros have had their engines replaced with similar American units Only one the Planes of Fame Air Museum s A6M5 has the original Sakae engine 94 The rarity of flyable Zeros accounts for the use of single seat North American T 6 Texans with heavily modified fuselages and painted in Japanese markings as substitutes for Zeros in the films Tora Tora Tora The Final Countdown and many other television and film depictions of the aircraft such as Baa Baa Black Sheep renamed Black Sheep Squadron One Model 52 was used during the production of Pearl Harbor Australia Edit 840 On display at the Australian Aviation Heritage Centre in Winnellie Northern Territory Wreckage of the forward fuselage inboard wings engine and propeller 95 96 5784 On display at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra Australian Capital Territory A restored A6M2 21 V 173 was retrieved as a wreck after the war and later found to have been flown by Saburō Sakai at Lae 97 98 China Edit Unknown serial number Beijing Military Museum 99 Germany Edit Replica On display at the Technik Museum Speyer in Speyer Rhineland Palatinate Replica of the fuselage section on display at IWM London 100 101 Indonesia Edit A6M on display at Dirgantara Mandala Museum Indonesia Unknown serial number The Dirgantara Mandala Museum in Yogyakarta has an A6M in its collection 99 Japan Edit 1493 On display at the Kawaguchiko Motor Museum in Fujikawaguchiko Yamanashi 102 4168 4240 4241 On display at the Yushukan in Chiyoda Tokyo 103 4685 On display at Hamamatsu Air Base in Hamamatsu Shizuoka 104 4708 On display at the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Museum in Komaki Aichi 105 31870 A two seater on display at the National Museum of Nature and Science in Taito Tokyo 106 62343 On display at the Chiran Peace Museum for Kamikaze Pilots in Chiran Kagoshima 107 82729 On display at the Yamato Museum in Kure Hiroshima 108 91518 On display at the Kawaguchiko Motor Museum in Fujikawaguchiko Yamanashi 109 92717 On display at the Kawaguchiko Motor Museum in Fujikawaguchiko Yamanashi 110 Replica On display at MCAS Iwakuni in Iwakuni Yamaguchi 111 112 Replica Used as movie prop for 2013 film The Eternal Zero On display at Usa City Peace Museum Usa Ōita Prefecture 113 New Zealand Edit 3835 3844 On display at the Auckland War Memorial Museum in Auckland Auckland Region 114 It was taken to New Zealand from Bougainville in October 1945 on board the ferry Wahine which was being used to repatriate troops The Zero had been caught on the ground on Bougainville damaged in the bombing during the Allied Bougainville campaign in November 1943 The plane had been hidden by the Japanese who had restored it with the goal of flying it off the island The plane was retrieved by RNZAF intelligence officers in September 1945 at the Japanese airfield at Buin in southern Bougainville 115 United Kingdom Edit 196 On display at the Imperial War Museum London in London Greater London Forward fuselage displayed 116 117 118 3685 On display at the Imperial War Museum Duxford in Duxford Cambridgeshire 3685 was salvaged from Taroa Island in 1991 and acquired by the museum in 2000 before being put on display in 2010 Fuselage displayed in unrestored condition 119 United States Edit 1303 In storage at the Flying Heritage Collection in Everett Washington 120 3618 In storage at Fantasy of Flight in Polk City Florida 121 4043 In storage at Fantasy of Flight in Polk City Florida Along with several other Zeros this aircraft was recovered by the Australian War Memorial Museum in the early 1970s from Rabaul in the South Pacific The markings suggest that it was in service after June 1943 and further investigation suggests that it has cockpit features associated with the Nakajima built Model 52b If this is correct it is most likely one of the 123 aircraft lost by the Japanese during the assault of Rabaul The aircraft was shipped in pieces to the attraction and it was eventually made up for display as a crashed aircraft Much of the aircraft is usable for patterns and some of its parts can be restored to one day make this a basis for a flyable aircraft 122 123 4340 On display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington D C 124 4400 In storage at the Flying Heritage Collection in Everett Washington 125 5356 5451 On display at the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum in Honolulu Hawaii This aircraft was formerly flown by the Commemorative Air Force after being restored by Robert Diemert 126 5357 Owned by the Planes of Fame Air Museum in Chino California This aircraft 61 120 is the only airworthy example powered with an original Sakae radial engine 127 5450 On display at the National Naval Aviation Museum at NAS Pensacola in Pensacola Florida 128 129 23186 On display at the San Diego Air and Space Museum in San Diego California This aircraft is on loan from the National Air and Space Museum 130 131 The museum previously had another Zero in its collection msn 4323 but it was destroyed in a fire on 22 February 1978 132 51553 On display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright Patterson AFB in Dayton Ohio 133 134 It was restored by Century Aviation 135 Replica Owned by Warren Pietsch at the Texas Flying Legends Museum in Houston Texas This aircraft known as the Blayd Zero is a reconstruction based on templating original Zero components recovered from the South Pacific To be considered a restoration and not a reproduction the builders used a small fraction of parts from the original Zero landing gear in the reconstruction 136 137 It was built as an A6M2 Model 21 138 139 This aircraft was damaged in a ground accident on 15 March 2016 when a Goodyear FG 1D Corsair taxiing behind it overran the tail of the Zero with the Corsair s propeller shredding roughly the last third of the Zero s fuselage and its control surfaces 140 141 Replica 3869 Owned by the Southern California Wing of the Commemorative Air Force in Camarillo California This aircraft is an A6M3 that was recovered from Babo Airfield Indonesia in 1991 It was partially restored from several A6M3s in Russia then brought to the United States for restoration The aircraft was re registered in 1998 and displayed at the Museum of Flying in Santa Monica California It uses a Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 75 engine 142 143 Replica 3852 Owned by the Flying Heritage Collection in Everett Washington This aircraft was recovered from Babo Airfield Indonesia and restored first in Russia then in California and finally in Washington state before being delivered to the Flying Heritage Collection 144 145 It has a P amp W engine installed 146 Replica 3858 Fagen Fighters WWII Museum Granite Falls Minnesota Formerly owned by businessman Masahide Ishizuka in Kanoya Kagoshima Pratt amp Whitney R 1830 engine 147 148 149 Replica Under airworthy rebuild by Legend Flyers in Everett Washington 150 151 for the Military Aviation Museum This aircraft uses a small amount of parts from 3148 152 Specifications A6M2 Type 0 Model 21 Edit Orthographically projected diagram of the Mitsubishi A6M Zero Data from The Great Book of Fighters 35 Aircraft Profile 129 The Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero sen 153 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 9 06 m 29 ft 9 in Wingspan 12 m 39 ft 4 in Height 3 05 m 10 ft 0 in Wing area 22 44 m2 241 5 sq ft Aspect ratio 6 4 Airfoil root MAC118 or NACA 2315 tip MAC118 or NACA 3309 154 Empty weight 1 680 kg 3 704 lb Gross weight 2 796 kg 6 164 lb Max takeoff weight 2 796 kg 6 164 lb Fuel capacity 518 L 137 US gal 114 imp gal internal 1 330 L 87 US gal 73 imp gal drop tank Powerplant 1 Nakajima NK1C Sakae 12 14 cylinder air cooled radial piston engine 700 kW 940 hp for take off710 kW 950 hp at 4 200 m 13 800 ft dd dd Propellers 3 bladed Sumitomo Hamilton constant speed propellerPerformance Maximum speed 533 km h 331 mph 288 kn at 4 550 m 14 930 ft Cruise speed 333 km h 207 mph 180 kn Never exceed speed 600 km h 370 mph 320 kn Range 1 870 km 1 160 mi 1 010 nmi Ferry range 3 102 km 1 927 mi 1 675 nmi Service ceiling 10 000 m 33 000 ft Rate of climb 15 7 m s 3 090 ft min Time to altitude 6 000 m 20 000 ft in 7 minutes 27 seconds Wing loading 107 4 kg m2 22 0 lb sq ft Power mass 0 254 kW kg 0 155 hp lb Armament Guns Divergence of trajectories between 7 7 mm and 20 mm ammunition2 7 7 mm 0 303 in Type 97 aircraft machine guns in the engine cowling with 500 rounds per gun 2 20 mm 0 787 in Type 99 1 Mk 3 cannon in the wings with 60 rounds per gun Bombs 2 60 kg 130 lb bombs or 1 fixed 250 kg 550 lb bomb for kamikaze attacksNotable appearances in media EditMain article Aircraft in fiction A6M ZeroSee also Edit Japan portal Aviation portalMitsubishi A5M Mitsubishi J2MRelated development Nakajima A6M2 N Mitsubishi A7MAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Brewster F2A Buffalo Curtiss P 36 Hawk Curtiss Wright CW 21 Fiat G 50 Freccia Gloster F 5 34 Grumman F4F Wildcat IAR 80 Macchi C 200 Nakajima Ki 43 Weiss Manfred WM 23 Ezust NyilRelated lists List of aircraft of Japan during World War II Carrier aircraft used during World War II List of aircraft of World War II List of fighter aircraft List of military aircraft of JapanReferences EditNotes Edit Replica reconstruction see Surviving aircraft Note In Japanese service carrier fighter units were referred to as Kanjō sentōkitai The Japanese Zero was one of the main aircraft s used in The attack on Pearl Harbor Citations Edit Hawks Chuck The Best Fighter Planes of World War II chuckhawks com Retrieved 18 January 2007 a b Young 2013 p 36 a b Thompson with Smith 2008 p 231 Mersky Peter B Cmdr USNR Time of the Aces Marine Pilots in the Solomons 1942 1944 ibiblio org Retrieved 18 January 2007 Willmott 1980 pp 40 41 Angelucci and Matricardi 1978 p 138 Young Edward M 2013 F4F Wildcat vs A6M Zero Sen Pacific Theater 1942 Oxford Great Britain Osprey p 18 ISBN 978 1 78096 322 8 a b c d Francillon 1970 pp 363 364 Yoshio Baba Extra super duralumin and successive aluminum alloys for aircraft Journal of Japan Institute of Light Metals Sumitomo Light Metal Ind Ltd Japan Volume 39 Issue 5 pp 378 395 Retrieved 22 November 2015 Tillman 1979 pp 5 6 96 Yoshimura 1996 p 108 Parshall and Tully 2007 p 79 a b c d Matricardi 2006 p 88 Chen C Peter Gao Youxin WW2DB Retrieved 3 December 2020 27 Japanese G3M bombers escorted by 13 A6M Zero fighters attacked Chongqing China the Chinese scrambled nine I 16 and 25 I 15bis fighters total of 34 At least three A6M Zero fighters were damaged in this engagement at least one of which was credited to future ace Lieutenant Gao Youxin in an I 15bis fighter Gustavsson Hakans Chinese biplane fighter aces Clifford Long Legged Louie Yim Qun Biplane Fighter Aces China Retrieved 3 December 2020 Without radios they could not communicate with one another Maj Cheng Hsiao Yu led the entire 22nd PS into battle nine I 15bis from the 28th PS led by Maj Louie Yim Qun engaged the Zeros over Chungking Japanese Zeroes with their high speed amazing climbing ability agility and firepower totally dominated the fight After half an hour s battle most of the surviving Chinese planes were low on fuel this battle was debut of the Zero fighter and the Chinese Air Force suffered its worst defeat Maj Louie Yim Qun was one of the injured in the fight landed his badly shot up I 15bis at Suining and counted 48 bullet holes on it At least two pilots from 21st PS were killed one more aircraft was hit making a forced landing the wounded pilot suffering a leg shot off and later dying from loss of blood of the pilots that survived Hsu Hwa Jiang who later in the war continued to fly with the CACW Glancey 2006 p 170 a b Francillon 1979 p 365 a b Gunston 1980 p 162 Young 2013 p 5 Nijboer 2009 p 4 Smith 2015 pp 146 149 Spick 1997 p 165 Spick 1983 p 118 Lundstrom 1994 pp 266 270 Stille 2019 Kindle location 1233 1237 Rossi J R Chuck Older s Tale Hammerhead Stalls and Snap Rolls Written in the mid 1980s AFG American Volunteer Group The Flying Tigers 1998 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Holmes 2011 p 314 Thruelsen 1976 pp 173 174 a b Commander in Chief Pacific Fleet report Serial 01849 of 28 June 1942 USS Yorktown CV 5 Action Report Action Reports Battle of Midway Naval History and Heritage Command 20 March 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Young 2013 pp 6 51 82 a b c d Wilcox 1942 p 86 Saburo Sakai Zero Ace pilots Retrieved 13 October 2010 Gunson Bill 1991 Plane Speaking Somerset England Patrick Stepens Limited p 131 ISBN 1 85260 166 3 a b Hanes Elizabeth 16 January 2015 The Akutan Zero How a Captured Japanese Fighter Plane Helped Win World War II History com Jablonski 1979 page needed a b Green and Swanborough 2001 page needed a b c Francillon 1979 p 399 a b Nohara 1993 p 76 a b c Nohara 1993 p 51 Reisen no Tsuioku Model Art 883 2013 p 75 a b Nohara 1993 pp 76 77 a b c Mechanic of World Aircraft Vol 5 Koujinsha 1994 pp 220 221 Nohara 1993 p 78 Mikesh 1994 p 90 Famous Airplanes of the World 9 1993 p 33 a b Quarterly Report on Research Experiments Vol 1 30 March 1945 CINCPAC CINCPOA Bulletin Special Translation No 52 No 67 45 p 14 D Mikesh 1981 p 32 A6M4 J Aircraft com Retrieved 13 October 2010 Mikesh 1994 p 53 Nohara 1993 p 80 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 pp 57 59 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou 1993 p 21 Summary of Provisional Handling Instructions February 1944 English translation Mikesh 1994 p 115 Reisen Mushimegane Fumetsu no Reisen Maru 2007 Gajda Stan The transitional Zero New evidence that supports the theory j aircraft 28 July 2010 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Halls L G The Hybrid Zero More Evidence j aircraft 9 September 2010 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Lansdale Jim Transitional model of the Mitsubishi ReiSen 52 A6M5 Part II j aircraft 21 March 2010 Retrieved 30 November 2015 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 pp 57 59 A6M5 Summary of Provisional Handling Instructions February 1944 translated at 4 4 A6M5 Summary of Provisional Handling Instructions February 1944 translated p 4 4 Nohara 1993 p 79 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou 1993 p 23 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou 1993 p 24 a b Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou 1993 p 22 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou p 77 Nohara 1993 p 82 Mechanic of World Aircraft Vol 5 Koujinsha p 220 221 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou pp 46 49 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou 1993 at 22 Sekai no Kessaku Ki Vol 9 Bunrindou 1993 p 23 Graham Rob FAQ Zero Night Fighter j aircraft com Retrieved 30 November 2015 Nohara 1993 p 84 Winchester Jim 2002 Fighters of the 20th Century United Kingdom The Crowood Press Ltd p 41 ISBN 978 1840373882 AIAA Student Journal American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics 20 3 41 1982 Retrieved 9 June 2019 A Oleson James A Oleson 2007 In Their Own Words True Stories and Adventures of the American Fighter Ace United States iUniverse Inc p 166 ISBN 978 0595471164 Munson Kenneth 1968 Aircraft of World War Two United Kingdom Doubleday amp Company Inc p 123 ISBN 978 0385034715 a b D Angina James 2016 Mitsubishi A6M Zero Great Britain Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 0821 9 a b Collier Basil 1979 Japanese Aircraft of World War II Great Britain Sidgwick amp Jackson pp 97 100 ISBN 0 283 98399 X a b Mondey David 2006 The Hamlyn Concise Guide to Axis Aircraft of World War II Great Britain Bounty Books pp 194 197 ISBN 978 0 753714 60 7 a b Newdick Thomas 2017 Japanese Aircraft of World War II 1937 1945 United Kingdom Amber Books pp 65 72 ISBN 978 1 78274 474 0 Kittel Graf Mantelli Brown 2017 Fighter Zero Edizioni R E I pp 34 59 ISBN 978 237297330 4 C Smith Peter Brown 2014 Mitsubishi Zero Japan s Legendary Fighter Great Britain Pen amp Sword Aviation ISBN 978 1 78159319 6 Francillon 1970 pp 374 75 Appendix D pp 124 125 Washington D C Corporation report the United States Bombing Survey Aircraft Division 1947 FAOTW 1996 p 137 Francillon 1979 pp 364 365 Appendix M pp 40 42 Washington D C Corporation report the United States Bombing Survey Aircraft Division 1947 Appendix I p 42 Washington D C Corporation report the United States Bombing Survey Aircraft Division 1947 Appendix B p 6 Washington D C Corporation report the United States Bombing Survey Aircraft Division 1947 Francillon 1979 p 377 Francillon 1979 p 428 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 5356 Tail EII 102 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 12 January 2012 Factsheets Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero National Museum of the USAF Archived from the original on 13 January 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2012 Seaman Richard Aircraft air shows richard seaman com Retrieved 13 October 2010 Mitsubishi Zero Australian Aviation Heritage Centre Australian Aviation Heritage Centre Archived from the original on 29 February 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Airframe Dossier MitsubishiA6M s n 5349 IJNAF c n 840 Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 22 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M2 Model 21 Zero Fighter Aircraft Japanese Navy Air Force Australian War Memorial Australian War Memorial Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 5784 Tail V 173 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 a b Smith 2015 p 141 Airframe Dossier MitsubishiA6M Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 22 February 2016 A6M Reisen Zeke Preserved Axis Aircraft ClassicWings com Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 1493 PacificWrecks net Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 29 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 4168 Tail 81 161 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5a Model 52ko Zero Manufacture Number 4685 Tail 43 188 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Ko Zero Manufacture Number 4708 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 31870 Tail 53 122 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5c Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 62343 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M7 Model 62 Zero Manufacture Number 82729 Tail 210 B 118 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 91518 PacificWrecks net Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 29 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 92717 PacificWrecks net Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 29 February 2016 Clark Charlie 26 January 2012 Zero hangar links present to past Marines Retrieved 22 February 2016 Pack Justin 16 February 2013 Station scouts visit Zero Hangar Stripes Japan Retrieved 22 February 2016 Movie Replica Mitsubishi Zero Goes on Display in Japan warbirdsnews com 16 July 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2022 Taylan Justin A6M3 Model 22 Zero Manufacture Number 3844 Tail 2 152 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Romano Gail 11 September 2020 The Zero Two men and a plane Auckland Museum Retrieved 20 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Airframe Dossier Mitsubishi A6M5 s n BI 05 IJNAF Aerial Visuals AerialVisuals ca Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Zero PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Goodall Geoffrey 14 October 2014 MITSUBISHI A6M REISEN ZERO SEN ZEKE PDF Geoff Goodall s Aviation History Site Geoffrey Goodall Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M3 Model 22 Zero Manufacture Number 3685 Tail Y2 176 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 1303 Tail 61 121 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M3 Model 22 Zero Manufacture Number 3618 Tail 133 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Zero Fantasy of Flight Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2011 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 4043 Tail 3 108 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M5 Reisen Zero Fighter Model 52 ZEKE Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M5 Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 4400 Tail HK 102 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 5356 Tail EII 102 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M5 Zeke Planes of Fame Air Museum planesoffame org A6M2 ZERO National Naval Aviation Museum Naval Aviation Museum Foundation Retrieved 22 February 2016 Justin Taylan A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 5450 Tail EII 140 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M7 Zero sen San Diego Air amp Space Museum Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M7 Model 62 Zero Manufacture Number 23186 Tail ヨ 143 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin 7 August 2015 A6M5 Model 52 Zero Manufacture Number 4323 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero National Museum of the United States Air Force 20 April 2015 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M2 Model 21 Zero Manufacture Number 51553 Tail 313 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 22 February 2016 1943 Mitsubishi A6M2 Type 21 Zero Century Aviation Century Aviation Retrieved 11 May 2016 Blayd Corporation pacificwrecks com Retrieved 29 January 2007 Examination of Blayd Zero Artifacts j aircraft com Retrieved 29 January 2007 Last Samurai A6M2 Model 21 Zero Archived 13 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Texas Flying Legends Museum Retrieved 8 December 2013 Pietsch Warren Museum Secrets Texas Flying Legends Museum Retrieved 30 November 2015 UPDATE Original Japanese Zero Loses Tail Retrieved 14 April 2016 NTSB accident report CEN16CA126A Taylan Justin A6M3 Model 22 Zero Manufacture Number 3869 Replica Tail X 133 PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero CAF SoCal CAF So Cal Wing Retrieved 9 March 2023 Taylan Justin A6M3 Model 22 Zero Manufacture Number 3852 Replica Two Seater PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M3 Type 22 Zero Century Aviation Century Aviation Retrieved 11 May 2016 MITSUBISHI A6M3 22 REISEN ZERO Flying Heritage Collection Friends of Flying Heritage Archived from the original on 14 February 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2016 Yoshimura Shigeo 6 November 2014 Victory as airworthy Zero fighter returns home after 70 year hiatus The Asahi Shimbun The Asahi Shimbun Company Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 23 February 2016 Toda Miki 27 January 2016 World War II Zero fighter flies over Japan AP Associated Press Retrieved 23 February 2016 Taylan Justin A6M3 Model 22 Zero Manufacture Number 3858 Replica PacificWrecks com Pacific Wrecks Incorporated Retrieved 23 February 2016 Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero Air Assets International Airassets Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Legend Flyers Zero Restoration Update Warbirds News 26 August 2015 Retrieved 29 February 2016 The Tale of a Zero Fighter by Ron Cole Warbirds News 27 February 2014 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Francillon Rene J 1966 Aircraft Profile 129 The Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero sen September 1982 Canada reprint ed Berkshire Profile Publications Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography Edit Angelucci Enzo and Peter M Bowers The American Fighter Sparkford UK Haynes Publishing 1987 ISBN 0 85429 635 2 Fernandez Ronald Excess Profits The Rise of United Technologies Boston Addison Wesley 1983 ISBN 978 0 201 10484 4 Ford Douglas Informing Airmen The U S Army Air Forces Intelligence on Japanese Fighter Tactics in the Pacific Theatre 1941 5 International History Review 34 Dec 2012 725 52 Francillon R J Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War London Putnam 1970 ISBN 0 370 00033 1 Glancey Jonathan Spitfire The Illustrated Biography London Atlantic Books 2006 ISBN 978 1 84354 528 6 Green William and Gordon Swanborough The Great Book of Fighters St Paul Minnesota MBI Publishing 2001 ISBN 0 7603 1194 3 Gunston Bill Aircraft of World War 2 London Octopus Books Limited 1980 ISBN 0 7064 1287 7 Holmes Tony ed Dogfight The Greatest Air Duels of World War II Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2011 ISBN 978 1 84908 482 6 Huggins Mark January February 2004 Hunters over Tokyo The JNAF s Air Defence of Japan 1944 1945 Air Enthusiast 109 66 71 ISSN 0143 5450 Jablonski Edward Airwar New York Doubleday amp Co 1979 ISBN 0 385 14279 X James Derek N Gloster Aircraft since 1917 London Putnam and Company Ltd 1987 ISBN 0 85177 807 0 Lundstrom John B The First Team and the Guadalcanal Campaign Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1994 ISBN 1 55750 526 8 Matricardi Paolo Aerei Militari Caccia e Ricognitori in Italian Milan Mondadori Electa 2006 Mikesh Robert C Warbird History Zero Combat amp Development History of Japan s Legendary Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter St Paul Minnesota Motorbooks International 1994 ISBN 0 87938 915 X Mikesh Robert C Zero Fighter New York Crown Publishers Inc 1981 copyright Zokeisha Publications Tokyo ISBN 0 517 54260 9 Okumiya Masatake and Jiro Horikoshi with Martin Caidin Zero New York E P Dutton amp Co 1956 Nijboer Donald Seafire Vs A6M Zero Pacific Theatre Oxford UK Osprey Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 1 8460 3433 6 Nohara Shigeru Aero Detail 7 Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter Tokyo Dai Nippon Kaiga Co Ltd 1993 ISBN 4 499 22608 2 Parshall Jonathan and Anthony Tully Shattered Sword The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway Washington D C Potomac Books Inc 2007 ISBN 978 1 57488 924 6 paperback Plane Facts Zero sen ancestry Air International October 1973 Vol 3 No 4 pp 199 200 Smith Peter C Mitsubishi Zero Japan s Legendary Fighter Barnsley South Yorkshire UK Pen amp Sword Books 2015 ISBN 978 1 7815 9319 6 Soumille Jean Claude September 1999 Les avions japonais aux couleurs francaises Japanese Aircraft in French Colors Avions Toute l aeronautique et son histoire in French 78 6 17 ISSN 1243 8650 Spick Mike Allied Fighter Aces of World War II London Greenhill Books 1997 ISBN 1 85367 282 3 Stille Mark Guadalcanal 1942 43 Japan s bid to knock out Henderson Field and the Cactus Air Force Air Campaign Osprey Publishing 2019 ISBN 1472835514 Thompson J Steve with Peter C Smith Air Combat Manoeuvres The Technique and History of Air Fighting for Flight Simulation Hersham Surrey UK Ian Allan Publishing 2008 ISBN 978 1 903223 98 7 Thruelsen Richard The Grumman Story Praeger Press 1976 ISBN 0 275 54260 2 Tillman Barrett Hellcat The F6F in World War II Naval Institute Press 1979 ISBN 1 55750 991 3 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd Corporation Report I Washington D C 1947 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division Nakajima Aircraft Company Ltd Corporation Report II Washington D C 1947 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division Hitachi Aircraft Company Ltd Corporation Report VII Washington D C 1947 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Aircraft Division Army Air Arsenal and Navy Air Depots Corporation Report XIX Washington D C 1947 Wilcox Richard The Zero The first famed Japanese fighter captured intact reveals its secrets to U S Navy aerial experts Life 4 November 1942 Willmott H P Zero A6M London Bison Books 1980 ISBN 0 89009 322 9 Yoshimura Akira translated by Retsu Kaiho and Michael Gregson Zero Fighter Westport Connecticut Praeger Publishers 1996 ISBN 0 275 95355 6 Young Edward M F4F Wildcat vs A6M Zero sen Oxford UK Osprey 2013 ISBN 978 1 7809 6322 8 Further reading EditBueschel Richard M Mitsubishi A6M1 2 2N Zero Sen in Imperial Japanese Naval Air Service Canterbury Kent UK Osprey Publications Ltd 1970 ISBN 0 85045 018 7 Francillon Rene J The Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero Sen Aircraft in Profile number 129 Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile Publications Ltd 1966 Francillon Rene J The Mitsubishi A6M3 Zero Sen Hamp Aircraft in Profile number 190 Leatherhead Surrey UK Profile Publications Ltd 1967 Jackson Robert Combat Legend Mitsubishi Zero Ramsbury Marlborough Wiltshire UK Airlife Publishing 2003 ISBN 1 84037 398 9 Juszczak Artur Mitsubishi A6M Zero Tarnobrzeg Poland Redbourn UK Mushroom Model Publications 2001 ISBN 83 7300 085 2 Kinzey Bert Attack on Pearl Harbor Japan awakens a Sleeping Giant Blacksburg Virginia USA Military Aviation Archives 2010 ISBN 978 0 9844665 0 4 Marchand Patrick and Junko Takamori Illustrator A6M Zero Les Ailes de Gloire 2 in French Le Muy France Editions d Along 2000 ISBN 2 914403 02 X Mikesh Robert C and Rikyu Watanabe Illustrator Zero Fighter London Jane s Publishing Company Ltd 1981 ISBN 0 7106 0037 2 Nohara Shigeru A6M Zero in Action Aircraft 59 Carrollton Texas USA Squadron Signal Publications Inc 1983 ISBN 0 89747 141 5 Nohara Shigeru Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter Aero Detail 7 in Japanese with English captions Tokyo Japan Dai Nippon Kaiga Company Ltd 1993 ISBN 4 499 22608 2 Okumiya Masatake and Jiro Horikoshi with Martin Caidin ed Zero The Story of Japan s Air War in the Pacific 1941 45 New York Ballantine Books 1956 No ISBN Plane Facts Zero sen ancestry Air International Vol 3 No 4 October 1973 pp 199 200 Richards M C and Donald S Smith Mitsubishi A6M5 to A6M8 Zero Sen Zeke 52 Aircraft in Profile number 236 Windsor Berkshire UK Profile Publications Ltd 1972 Sakaida Henry Imperial Japanese Navy Aces 1937 45 Botley Oxford UK Osprey Publishing Ltd 1998 ISBN 1 85532 727 9 Sakaida Henry The Siege of Rabaul St Paul Minnesota Phalanx Publishing 1996 ISBN 1 883809 09 6 Sheftall M G Blossoms in the Wind Human Legacies of the Kamikaze New York NAL Caliber 2005 ISBN 0 451 21487 0 Wilson Stewart Zero Hurricane amp P 38 The Story of Three Classic Fighters of WW2 Legends of the Air 4 Fyshwick Australia Aerospace Publications Pty Ltd 1996 ISBN 1 875671 24 2 External links Edit Media related to Mitsubishi A6M Zero at Wikimedia Commons Tour A6M5 Zero cockpit Mitsubishi A6M Zero Japanese fighter aircraft design construction history WW2DB A6M Zero www j aircraft com Quotes A6M Mitsubishi A6M Reisen Zero Fighter Joao Paulo Juliao Matsuura Mitsubishi A6M2 K and A6M5 K Joao Paulo Juliao Matsuura Nakajima A6M2 N Joao Paulo Juliao Matsuura War Prize The Capture of the First Japanese Zero Fighter in 1941Video linksPlanes of Fame 61 120 A6M5 Zero Flight Video on YouTube Warren Pietsch Texas Flying Legends Museum A6M2 Model 21 Zero Last Samurai Museum Secrets on YouTube Warren Pietsch Texas Flying Legends Museum A6M2 Model 21 Zero Last Samurai Aerobatic Airshow on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mitsubishi A6M Zero amp oldid 1145637824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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