The Zero was originally conceived as a replacement for the Mitsubishi
Type 96 (A5M) fighter, the first of the Japanese Navy's operational
monoplanes. On October 5, 1937, the Japanese Navy furnished the Mitsubishi
and Nakajima companies with its requirements for a new fighter with a
maximum speed exceeding 310 m.p.h.
To the Japanese the Zero-Sen was everything that the
Spitfire
was to the British nation. It
symbolized Japan's conduct of the war, for as the Zero fared, so fared the Japanese nation. The
Zero fighter marked the beginning of a new epoch in naval aviation. It was the first shipboard
fighter capable of besting its land-based opponents. It created a myth--the myth of Japanese
invincibility in the air, and one to which the Japanese themselves fell victim as a result of the
almost total destruction of Allied air power in the early days of the Pacific war. In its day the Zero
was the world's foremost carrier-based fighter, and its appearance over Pearl Harbour came as a
complete surprise to the American forces. Its successive appearance over every major battle area
in the opening days of the war seemed to indicate that Japan possessed unlimited supplies of this
remarkable fighter, and its almost mystical powers of maneuver and ability to traverse vast
stretches of water fostered the acceptance of the myth of its invincibility in Allied minds.
The supremacy of the 'Zero', or Mitsubishi Type 0, in the Far
East during 1941 and 1942 is illustrated by the story of just one
engagement, on April 11,1942. Flying out of Lae airstrip in eastern New
Guinea, Japanese Navy 'ace' pilot Saburo Sakae, section
leader in a nine-plane formation of A6M2 fighters made for Port Moresby airfield, held by the Allies. There
the formation encountered four United States Army Air Force
Bell P-39D Airacobras ,
which were left to Sakae and his wingmen. Opening up with his 20 mm cannon
before the Americans could take evasive action, Sakae dived on the two
rear-most fighters and sent them both down in flames. His wingmen bagged
one apiece. Within minutes the battle was over, with the Zeros
hardly scathed.
Designed by Jiro Horikoshi to achieve the highest possible speed and maneuverability from a
Nakajima Sakae 12 engine of only 950 hp, the Zero had a light structure and powerful armament.
It was an aggressive weapon, designed to perform well in a dogfight, and against Allied aircraft of
1941-2 vintage it did just that. It mastered all opposing fighters, irrespective of whether it flew
from carriers, as at Pearl Harbor, or had to operate over long distances from land bases. Even the
Philippines did not escape the Zeros' scourge, as the Japanese fighter used a jettisonable fuel tank
to help cover the hundreds of miles of sea between those islands and its bases on Formosa.
Unbeknown to the Allies was the fact that the ZeroSen possessed many shortcomings which were
only to be revealed six months later when a virtually intact specimen was obtained. Prior to this
event, any captured part of a Zero-Sen was regarded as a prize. Piece by piece Allied intelligence
teams endeavored to rebuild an example of this fighter for evaluation, only to be met by failure.
Then, 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 Zero, which had been built only the previous February, was
on its first operational mission, a mission that was also to prove its last in the service of the
Japanese Navy. 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 a small island designated
as an emergency landing field for crippled planes. Five weeks later an American naval scouting
party discovered the Japanese fighter upside down in a marsh on the island of Aktan, its pilot dead
with a broken neck.
This single fighter was probably one of the greatest prizes of the Pacific war. Hardly damaged, it
was shipped back to the U.S.A. where it was exhaustively tested. The tests revealed the fighter's
faults and shattered the myth that surrounded it.
To the Japanese the Zero-Sen was everything that the
Spitfire
was to the British nation. It symbolized Japan's conduct of the war and it
created a myth of Japanese invincibility in the air.
The tables were turned when the A6M5 version of 'Zeke', as the Type 0 was known to the Allies,
came up against a new generation of US Navy and Army fighters, with
powerful engines and heavy protection for their pilot and fuel tanks.
Against them the Zero still basically the design which had flown first on
April 1,1939 offered minimal protection for either pilot or fuel. From
1943 the Zeros fell like flies, due in part to the newly-found confidence
of Allied pilots, who were by now better trained, and with
improved morale after the Coral Sea and Midway victories.
The Zero was originally conceived as a replacement for the Mitsubishi Type 96 (A5M) fighter,
the first of the Japanese Navy's operational monoplanes. On October 5, 1937, the Japanese Navy
furnished the Mitsubishi and Nakajima companies with its requirements for a new fighter with a
maximum speed exceeding 310 m.p.h., the ability to climb to 9,840 feet in 3.5 minutes,
manuevrability and range exceeding any existing fighter and an armament of two cannon and two
machine-guns. These demands were far in excess of any previously made of the Japanese aircraft
industry and, viewing them as unrealistic, the Nakajima company withdrew from the project
following a design meeting at Yokosuka on January 17,1938. Mitsubishi alone accepted the task
of meeting the requirements of the 12-Shi (twelfth year of the Showa reign) project as it was
known, and design work began under the direction of Jiro Horikoshi, chief designer of Mitsubishi
Jukogyo K.K.
The chosen power plant was the
Mitsubishi MK2 Zuisei 13
(Auspicious Star), a fourteen cylinder twin row radial of 780 h.p., later
known under the unified JNAF/JAAF designation system as the
Ha.31/13.
This engine was selected owing to its light weight and small diameter, and a two-blade
constant-speed propeller was fitted. Extreme care was given to structural weight as
manoeuvrability was directly related to wing loading, and extensive use was made of Extra-Super
Duralumin (E.S.D.), a tough, lightweight alloy developed for aircraft use by the Sumitoma Metal
Industry Company. Work on the prototype progressed rapidly, and changes requested after
inspections of the 12-Shi mock-up on April 17 and July 11, 1938, were progressively
incorporated.
Modified Zeros assigned to Air Group 201 in the Philippines became the first
Japanese aircraft used on planned suicide missions against American surface
vessels.
On March 16, 1939, at Mitsubishi's Nagoya plant, the first prototype was completed. Engine
tests were conducted on March 18, and the aircraft was transferred to the Navy's Kasumigaura
airfield for flight testing. Here, on April 1,1939, one of Mitsubishi's test pilots, Katsuzo Shima,
flew the new fighter for the first time. The flight was an outstanding success, the only troubles
manifesting themselves being in the wheel brakes, the oil system and a slight tendency to vibrate.
Continued testing indicated that the vibration could be controlled by the use of a larger propeller
of three-bladed type. The prototype was accepted by the Navy on September 14,1939, as the
A6M1 Carrier Fighter, and, in the meantime, a second prototype had been completed, passing the
manufacturer's flight tests on October 18, 1939, and being accepted by the Navy one week later.
Both A6M1 prototypes carried two 20-mm. cannon in the wings and two 7.7-mm. guns in the
fuselage upper decking.
While flight testing of the A6M1 was under way, a new power plant passed its Navy acceptance
tests, the Nakajima NK1C Sakae 12
(Prosperity) of 925 h.p., which was only slightly larger and
heavier than the Zuisei. The
Sakae 12 (Ha.35/12)
was also a fourteen cylinder twin-row radial,
and the Navy decided that this engine should be installed in the third prototype which would be
known as the A6M2. Flight tests with the third machine began on January 18, 1940, and it was
discovered that, with its new-found power, the fighter amply exceeded the original performance
requirements which had been regarded as impossible a few months earlier. Even while the final
acceptance of the A6M2 as a production fighter was in the balance, the Japanese Navy requested
that a number of machines be delivered for operational use in China to meet growing aerial
opposition. Fifteen A6M2s were accordingly delivered for service in China and, on July 21, 1940,
left Japan for the Chinese mainland--almost eighteen months before the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The new fighters were enthusiastically received in China, and at the end of July the A6M2 was
officially adopted as the Type O Carrier Fighter, Model 11, popularly known in Japan as the
Zero-Sen (Zero Fighter). At this time, production models of Navy aircraft were assigned type
numbers based on the last number of the current Japanese year, and as 1940 was the year 2600 in
the Japanese calendar, the A6M series was known as the Zero.
The Type O Model 11 fighters first appeared over Chungking in August 1940. Approaching at an
altitude of 27,000 feet, they shot down all the defending Chinese fighters literally before the
defending aircraft knew what had hit them. They were used over many Chinese battle-areas
throughout the following months, and in over a year of operational use not one ZeroSen was
captured or inspected by the Chinese or American observers. As a result of the new fighter's
performance, General Chennault attempted to warn the U.S.A.A.F. of the Zero's capabilities, but
his warning was ignored and the new fighter remained an enigma to the western nations.
The A6M2 Model 21 was the version of the Zero employed at Pearl Harbour and throughout the
Pacific during the early stages of the war. With its maximum speed of 317 m.p.h. at 16,400 feet
and ability to climb to 19,680 feet in 7 minutes 27 seconds, it possessed an ascendancy over any
other fighter type in the Pacific. Production of the Model 21 by Mitsubishi totaled 740 aircraft,
and Nakajima also began to build this model in November 1941 at its Koizuma factory. When the
war commenced on December 7, 1941, the Japanese Navy had well over four hundred Zero
fighters, primarily Model 21s, available.
Some were also 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: Mitsubishi A6M6c Model 53C Zero-Sen
Powerplant:
One Nakajima NKIP Sakae 31 fourteen cylinder air-cooled two-row radial engine
rated at 1,120 h.p. at 2,800 r.p.m. for take-off and 1,210 h.p. (war emergency rating) at 8,000 ft.,
1,055 h.p. at 20,400 ft.
Dimensions:
Length: 29 ft. 9 in (9.06 m)
Height: 9 ft. 2 in (2.79 m)
Wing span: 36 ft. 1 in (10.99 m)
Weights:
Empty: 3,920 lb (1,778 kg)
Operational: 6,026 lb (2,733 kg)
Performance:
Maximum speed: 346 m.p.h. (556 km/h) at 19,680 ft (5,998 m)
Service ceiling: 35,100 ft (10,698 m)
Range: (normal fuel), 1,130 miles (1,818 km) at 152 mph (244 km/h)
875 miles (1408 km) at 212 mph (341 km/h)
Armament: Two Type 99 (Oerlikon) 20-mm. cannon and two 13.2-mm. machine-guns in wings
and one 13.2-mm. machine-gun and one 7.7-mm. machine-gun in the upper decking of the engine
cowling.