The Nakajima Ki-43 Hayabusa 'oscar' was very similar in shape, and also used
the same engines
In fairness to the army plane, the Hayabusa came first. The army
turned it down because of its perceived weaknesses in dogfighting.
Then the Zero was having trouble meeting specifications. So Mitsubishi
ditched its engine and borrowed the one Nakajima had developed for the
Hayabusa, and which of course was available since the Ki-43 wasn't
going into production.
Then came 1941 and the Malaya invasion plans. The army dusted off the
Ki-43, solved its slow-speed maneuver problem with "butterfly" flaps,
and put it into production. Only 100 had been built by Dec 7/8, and
only two fighter groups had been equipped with it.
all the best -- Dan Ford
email:
www.danford.net/letters.htm#9
see the Warbird's Forum at
http://www.danford.net/index.htm
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