試す 金 - 無料
ZERO MYTH, MYSTERY, AND FACT
Flight Journal
|November - December 2023
A test pilot compares the A6M5 Zero to U.S. fighters

Anyone who grew up in the 1920s and 1930s learned very quickly that "Made in Japan" meant cheap price and poor quality. Almost everything bought in the five-and-dime stores had that tag. It seemed impossible to purchase anything imported from Japan that would not wear out or break after a very short useful life.
That fact and the secrecy of the Japanese in the years before WW II regarding their military buildup anesthetized all of us regarding their real might.
The average American believed that in battle, Japanese military forces would crumble as fast as their products had. We were obviously wrong. They overran country after country and their air forces were superior to anything that could be put against them. Americans learned to respect the words "Jap Zero" as defining the epitome of aerial superiority. Just one day after December 7, 1941, "Made in Japan" had an entirely different meaning.
When I arrived at Grumman on November 11, 1942, and started flying the Wildcat fighter, I was immersed in the life-and-death struggle that the Wildcat, the only U.S. Navy fighter, was having with the Zero. All we heard from the communiqués was that we couldn't build and deliver the Wildcat fast enough. The story was still very fresh in everyone's mind how "Grummanites" had volunteered to work around the clock for seven days after the Battle of Midway to deliver a much needed 39 additional Wildcats to the fleet to replace some of the aircraft lost during that pivotal battle. The reason that Grumman could not deliver more at that time was that we had run out of engines. So, I felt somewhat ambivalent when I had the chance to fly the vaunted Zero in October of 1944 at the Joint Services Fighter Conference at the Patuxent Naval Air Test Center.
このストーリーは、Flight Journal の November - December 2023 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Flight Journal からのその他のストーリー

Flight Journal
WARBUG IN THE PACIFIC
Surviving combat in a Stinson OY-1/L-5
10 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
WINGS OF THE FLEET
Celebrating the U.S. Navy's 250-year legacy
9 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
THEIR FINEST HOUR
85 summers ago, the British Royal Air Force and Nazi Germany's Luftwaffe fought the world's first great air campaign
7 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
Warbirds & more at Innovations in Flight
SEVEN P-51S AND THE B-29 “DOC” were among the warbirds that flew in for the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum's “Innovations in Flight” day on June 14 at the Steven F.
2 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
MALTA SPITFIRE
American fighter ace Claude Weaver III DFC DFM
16 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
Pacemaker: Bellanca's 1929 Heavy Hauler
North Country workhorse
2 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
A TALL ORDER
The final flights of “Philippine Mars”– the last airworthy Martin JRM Mars flying boat
12 mins
September - October 2025

Flight Journal
Mohawk vs. MiG
An unusual air battle over North Vietnam
7 mins
July - August 2025

Flight Journal
GOING FOR IT!
A-4 Skyhawks strike hard in the Tet Offensive
11 mins
July - August 2025

Flight Journal
ZORRO STRIKES
The T-28's secret war in Southeast Asia
15 mins
July - August 2025
Translate
Change font size