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You might need a whole new plane for those engines. Just fitting the Ha-112 ( Kinsei 62) required deleting the cowl gun/s.
The Ha-41 was the earliest but used a single speed supercharger. the Ha-109 was probably the best bet after the Kinsei engine. It was only 4 in (110mm) bigger in diameter than the Sakae and 130 kg heavier than a Sakae 21 (which was 60kg heavier than a Sakae 11/12) and the Zero had been originally designed around the Mitsubishi Zuisei engine which was slightly smaller and lighter than the Sakae.
Problem for the Japanese was ANY engine change would cut into the range/radius of the Zero. Could a bigger engine allow enough fuel to make up for the increased consumption? A number of Zeros were lost when they changed form the Sakae 11/12 to the 21 due to smaller fuselage tank and increase fuel consumption.
Once the Japanese are on the defense it doesn't matter quite as much.
I see. These mechanics are well-beyond the scope for me. I wonder if I can infer this much on where they really needed to go. There are some who still think the F6F was just a souped-up F4F. I'm not saying, here, but I think you know what I mean. The fact is, the F6F was a radically-different machine. I hear you saying, outfitting these A6M5s, was like trying to outfit the F4Fs. I hear you saying, the Japanese Navy really needed a radically-different machine.
Of course, neither Japan, nor anybody, really, had the capacity to go there, as the U.S. had. I'm just saying, that's what they needed. They needed that new-generation fighter. I understand, now, also, why Mitsubishi didn't just throw bigger engines into these airframes. It tried, as you pointed out, in the A6M8, but it knew that was easier said than done. Had Japan not been going down at the time, I'm thinking it could easily have measured-up to the challenge.
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