Reluctant Poster
Tech Sergeant
- 1,624
- Dec 6, 2006
The A6M had more than twice the range of the 109 and there was no modern fighter in ww2 that had the slow speed maneuver capabilities of the Zero. Having more than an hour to spend in the air over Britain instead of 15 or 20 minutes would have had a huge impact on the battle. The British Battle of Britain veterans in spitfires flying out of Darwin in 1942 tried to dogfight the A6M and paid heavily for that mistake. It is my understanding that neither the British or German fighters in 1940 had self sealing tanks so the 109 would have had no advantage in ruggedness and in fact with the air cooled engine the Zero would have had an advantage.
It's kind of irrelevant since the Zero was not in production in time for the Battle of Britain. A preproduction batch saw service in China in September 1940.
People lose sight of the fact the the three best fighters in actual service in June 1940 were the 109, the Spitfire and the Hurricane. Trade the Luftwaffe or the RAF aircraft for any other airforce's front line fighters at that time the result would be a disaster.