buffnut453
Captain
I thought our BoB Zero would've been cruising at higher speed, given the reduced range (for the Zero).
A whole bunch of things need to change if the Luftwaffe were to operate the A6M1. I've already pointed out that armour protection for the pilot and, ultimately, self-sealing fuel tanks would be implemented pretty darn quickly because that's the experience the Luftwaffe gained from operations in Europe from the Spanish Civil War onwards. Then there's pilot parachutes. Did the A6M1 pilots fly with them? If not, that's yet more weight. Or radios? None of these things individually make much difference but add them all up and slap them in an airframe that was cutting every last ounce of surplus weight and it will affect performance.
Then there's the differences in operational theatre. In China and the Pacific, the A6M was needed to fly very long ranges over water or territory that wasn't defended. It accomplished that goal by having the external fuel tank, by flying at speeds below those typically required for combat, and by the pilots super-leaning the engine mixture. You could apply all those actions in Europe but--and it's a big BUT--you can't do it for very long. Thus the practical operational range of your proposed Luftwaffe A6M1 will be much less than that gained by the IJNAF in the Pacific. The Luftwaffe may not even bother with the external fuel tank because it won't actually buy them much.
Finally, the Luftwaffe is going up against an adversary with a thoroughly-developed fighter warning and control system, equipped with fighters that were close peers of the A6M1. The IJNAF could afford to go in high and slow in China in 1940 because it could dictate the terms of the fight against Chinese biplane fighters. That's not an option for a Luftwaffe A6M1. They'll have to increase speed and they will be confronted by larger, more capable defensive forces than they ever faced over China (or anywhere else in the Pacific until the middle of 1942.
Yes, the A6M1 in Luftwaffe fit would almost certainly out-range the Me109 but it would do it at a cost, and it certainly wouldn't have the range it exhibited in China and the Pacific. The IJNAF fighter pilots saw themselves as airborne samurai for whom death in battle was an honour. The Luftwaffe had an entirely different world view and any A6M1 operated by the latter has to adapt to their values.
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