Japanese Ace Yukiyoshi Wakamatsu
18 Kills, including...
Assuming that photo came from Yukiyoshi's a.c., I am willing to accept the claim of "one probable P-40." I have no confidence in the "18" claim.
Moderators: Joel Billings, Tankerace, siRkid
Japanese Ace Yukiyoshi Wakamatsu
18 Kills, including...
At higher speeds the Wildcat cornered inside the zero. THAT is the problem. It's because the control systems attached to the very large control surfaces on the Zeke (which large control surfaces made it very maneuverable at low speed) were not sufficiently robust to operate those control surfaces at high speed. This is an established fact for which there are numerous substantiating Japanese pilot accounts.
Assuming that photo came from Yukiyoshi's a.c., I am willing to accept the claim of "one probable P-40." I have no confidence in the "18" claim.
Please post some of these established factsand numerous claims.
If Pacific history was written by some of those on this thread the entire Japanese Army and Navy would have a total of 3, confirmed air to air victories in 4 years with 4 more probable, with an added ¨I doubt it¨ at the end of their sentence.
Bergerud, Eric M.
2001 Fire in the Sky: The Air War in the South Pacific. Westview Press, Boulder.
Lundstrom, John B.
1985 The First Team: Pacific Naval Air Combat from Pearl Harbor to Midway. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis.
1994 The First Team and the Guadalcanal Campaign: Naval Fighter Combat from August to November 1942. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis.
mdiehl, these are not ¨numerous claims¨ and ¨facts¨... these are books.
With two out of the three being published by the ¨The United States Naval Institute Press¨ Ahh, now that´s an objective source for you!
I wonder who their target buyers are and what they want to hear?
No, let´s skip the middle person and avoid any spin and look at source material and interpret it ourselves. Again, post me some actual ¨facts¨ for what you claim.
That is true. Citing them, however, provides you with several peer-reviewed published sources that are critically well receieved by historians all over the world in which the various examples of Wildcats turning inside Zeroes when operating at high speed can be read. It also saves me the effort of quoting a whole bunch of text that anyone who isn't lazy can simply obtain for themselves.
No, let´s skip the middle person and avoid any spin and look at source material and interpret it ourselves. Again, post me some actual ¨facts¨ for what you claim.
Flight envelope graphs, pilot interviews, etc. Things of this sort. Surely in the back of these books they have references for what they claim.
On a more general level you have posted a whole bunch of assertions that "everybody knows" that the Zero was a better fighter and more maneuverable. Yet you, yourself, have not provided a single peer-reviewed book or article that substantiates that claim.
Sure. Here is some good quotes for you to research mdiehl.
He [Smith] looked around. Both he and Lt. Kendrick were hit by many pieces of the last aircraft. Smith descended, trying to meet up with Kendrick, so they can go into the field together. He got down to 800 feet, along the north shoreline, but still couldn't find his wingman. Instead there were two Zeros which apparently had been strafing the field. Attacking two maneuverable Zeros at low altitude with a single Wildcat was very risky, but Smith lined one up and fired. He stayed with his twisting victim, which soon began to stream smoke and flame; it went right into the ground. The other Zero was nowhere in sight.
Instead there were two Zeros which apparently had been strafing the field. Attacking two maneuverable Zeros at low altitude with a single Wildcat was very risky, but Smith lined one up and fired. He stayed with his twisting victim, which soon began to stream smoke and flame; it went right into the ground. The other Zero was nowhere in sight.
I don't doubt you found 'em somewhere. But "a report said thus and so" has about as much credibility as a toothpaste commercial unless you specify the report.


ORIGINAL: tocaff
So there's more to how tight a plane can turn, fast it can fly, speed of dive, climb rate, roll rate, fire power, armored protection, self sealing tanks, etc. The driver has tons to do with it and this'll be argued to kingdom come without anybody giving an inch. So pilot training and skill along with tactics are probably the great equalizers.
zero was lightly armored and (I could be wrong) carried less ammo