The
Mitsubishi A6M Zero-Sen legendary status mirrored the fortunes of the
rising sun, in which four years, the sun would finally set. For the
Japanese and its former enemies, the A6M was the symbol of Japanese air
power. The A6M fighter marked the beginning of a new epoch in naval
aviation and was the first shipboard fighter capable of surpassing
land-based aircraft.1 With its tight turning radius, it was
an extremely deadly weapon in a dogfight, and was famous for its
ability to outmaneuver, Brewster F2A Buffaloes, Curtiss P-40s
and Grumman F4F Wildcats. As early as 1937, Claire Chennault, the
author of 'The Role of Defensive Pursuit,' warned the USAAF
about the dangers of Japanese air power. Apparently his warnings were
ignored, as the superiority of the A6M was a complete surprise to the
American forces.2 As leader of the Flying Tigers, Chennault
constantly stressed to his pilots, 'Never try to turn with a Zero.
Always get above the enemy and try to hit him with the first pass.'3
Because of the A6Ms exceptional range and performance, it was to bear
the brunt of the action, of almost every military engagement in the
Pacific, until the end of the war.
The
Navy submitted specifications for a new Navy Fighter on 19 May, 1937,
to supersede the Mitsubishi A5M, Navy Type 96 Carrier Fighter, which
had just become operational. The requirements called for were:
1. Maximum speed of 270 kt @ 4,000 m.
2. Climbing speed of 3,000 m in 9 min 30 sec.
3. Endurance of 1.5 to 2 hours at normal rated power.
4. Endurance of 6 to 8 hours at economical speed with drop tanks.
5. Armament of two 20 mm cannon and two 7.7 mm machine guns.
6. Provisions for two 60 kg bombs.
7. Provision for full radio and direction finder.
8. Takeoff run less than 70 m with a 27 knot headwind.
9. Manoeuvrability at least equal to the A5M.
The Navy ordered two
prototypes and plans were submitted by Nakajima and Mitsubishi.
Nakajima elected to drop their proposal for a fighter design and
Mitsubishi submitted their design led by designer Jiro Horikoshi. The
Mitsubishi prototype was the A6M1, retractable gear, all metal,
low-wing monoplane, powered with a 780 hp Mitsubishi Zuisei 13
engine. During flight testing, the two-bladed prop variable-pitch
propeller was replaced with a three-bladed variable pitch propeller.
Apart from maximum speed, all requirements were met or exceeded. The
Navy had authorized the production of an initial batch of A6M2s and
military trials progressed rapidly. While flight testing the A6M1, a
new power plant passed its Navy acceptance tests, and the 925 hp
Nakajima NK1C Sakae 12, which was slightly larger than the
Zuisei, was installed in the third A6M2 prototype. The initial
trials were completed in July 1940 and the navy assigned fifteen A6M2s
to combat trials in China. In China the A6M2s, reinforced with a number
of production aircraft, destroyed 99 Chinese aircraft with a loss of
only two of their own. The aircraft was accepted for production on July
1940 as Navy Type 0 Carrier Fighter Model 11 and in September 1941 were
prepared for the impending war with the Allies. Modifications were
introduced during production and A6M2 rear spar was reinforced and
manually folding wingtips were incorporated to allow clearance on the
carriers deck elevators. The modified aircraft was designated Navy Type
0 Carrier Fighter Model 21. The A6M2 Model 21 was the version utilized
at Pearl Harbour and throughout the Pacific, during the early stages of
the war. With its maximum speed of 288 kt @ 4,550 m and ability to
climb to 6,000 m in 7 minutes 27 seconds, it possessed an ascendancy
over any other fighter type in the Pacific. When the war began on
December 7, 1941, the Japanese Navy had 328 A6M2s in first line units.
The A6M possessed many
shortcomings, which were only to be revealed six months later when a
virtually intact specimen was obtained. On June 3, 1942, Flight Petty
Officer Tadayoshi Koga left the flight deck of the carrier Ryujo in his
Mitsubishi A6M2 Model 21 fighter as part of a task force assigned to
attack Dutch Harbour in the Aleutian Islands. His A6M2, which had been
built in February, was on its first operational mission. On his way
back to the Ryujo, Koga found that two bullets had punctured his fuel
supply and he informed his flight commander that he intended to land on
Akutan Island, designated as an emergency landing field. Koga did not
make the landing field and instead made a forced landing in a marsh
where the aircraft flipped over, in which he was killed, from a broken
neck. Five weeks later, a US Navy PBY Catalina, making a routine
patrol, discovered the Japanese fighter upside down in the marsh. This
single fighter was probably one of the greatest prizes of the Pacific
war. Hardly damaged, it was shipped back to the USA where it was
exhaustively tested. Information gathered during testing of the A6M2
prompted the American aircraft manufacturer Grumman, to lighten the
Grumman F4F Hellcat, and install a larger engine on the Grumman F6F
Hellcat.
Some Zeros were the
first aircraft used intentionally as suicide attack planes. Modified
Zeros assigned to Air Group 201 in the Philippines became the first
Japanese aircraft used on planned suicide missions against American
surface vessels. Air Group 201, assisted by volunteer pilots from Air
Group 601 and other Navy units in the area, became the first Kamikaze
(Divine Wind) suicide squadron in the Japanese Naval Air Force. The
outstanding successes gained by this form of attack led to the
formation of other Kamikaze units, and the bomb-carrying Zeros became
the prime suicide attack bombers of the Navy.
More Zero-Sens were
produced than any other wartime Japanese aircraft. Mitsubishi alone
produced 3,879 aircraft of this type, Nakajima built 6,215 which,
together with the 844 trainer and floatplane variants produced by
Sasebo, Hitachi and Nakajima, brought the grand total of A6M series
aircraft to 10,938. The Zero-Sen possessed complete mastery in the air
over the Pacific until the Battle of Midway in June 1942, the actual
turning point of the Pacific War although recognized by only a few at
the time. The value of the fighter steadily declined and its lowest
point was reached when it was selected to lead the Navy's Air Force in
mass suicide, and the Japanese nation followed. The installation of the
Kinsei engine brought Zero-Sen closer to Allied standards attained at
that stage in the war, but the moment for decision had passed and, with
it, victory for the Allies had become a foregone conclusion. The
fighter that started the Pacific war was no longer able to fight
it--nor was the nation that conceived it.
Specifications:
|
|
A6M2 - Model 21
|
A6M5 - Model 52
|
Dimensions:
|
Wing span: |
39
ft 4 7/16 in (12 m) |
46 ft 1 1/16 in (11 m)
|
Length: |
29
ft 8 11/16 in (9.06 m) |
29 ft 11 3/32 in
(9.121 m) |
Height: |
10
ft 0 1/16 in (3.05 m) |
11 ft 6 5/32 in (3.509
m) |
Weights:
|
Empty: |
3,704 lb. (1,680 kg) |
4,136 lb. (1,876 kg)
|
Loaded: |
5,313 lb (2,410 kg) |
6,025 lb (2,733 kg)
|
Performance:
|
Maximum Speed: |
331.5 mph (288 kt)
@ 14,930 ft (4,550 m) |
351 mph (305 kt)
@ 19,685 ft (6,000 m) |
Service Ceiling: |
32,810 ft. (10,000 m) |
38,520 ft. (11,740 m)
|
Maximum Range: |
1,930 miles (3,107 km) |
1,194 miles (1,922 km)
|
Powerplant A6M2:
|
Powerplant A6M5:
|
One Nakajima NK1C Sakae 12,
fourteen cyl., air-cooled, radial engine
rated at 940 hp for takeoff and 950 hp @ 13,780 ft (4,200 m),
driving a three-blade metal propeller. |
One Nakajima NK1F Sakae 21,
fourteen cyl., air-cooled, radial engine
rated at 1,130 hp for takeoff and 980 hp @ 19,685 ft (6,000 m),
driving a three-blade metal propeller. |
Armament:
|
Two forward-firing
7.7 mm Type 97 machine-guns in the upper fuselage and
two wing-mounted 20 mm Type 99 cannon with two external 132 lb (60
kg) bombs. |
|