Night Fighter Nut
Master Sergeant
This is great. You learn so much when you throw out a hypothetical question.
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That is correct. The main torpedo plane, D3A1 Val, that attacked Pear Harbor didn't go into service until 1940 and the Zero was only just starting to see service in March '39... Source: Rand McNally Encyclopedia of Military Aircraft.
Hey Night Fighter Nut, just want to correct your info...your source doesn't sound right for Zero service in 39....Cheers Wayne
If it was soo easy as pointing to correct info it would'nt be so fun to research!!
I would love to research all this info. Travel to the different places and meet those who were actually there. Some of my info comes from the Arizona memorial in Hawaii and some from the old vets who were still alive. I was stationed in Hawaii for three years and you hear about Pearl Harbor more often because of its proximity. Our barracks still had the bullet holes in it. I just find that the more you learn, the less you know and I would be the first to admit I don't know everything. Should someone have new information that I don't know, tell me where you found it and I will look it up and be eternally greatful.
How are you, Night Fighter Nut?
I recommend you "Osprey Aviation Elite" or Bunrindo's "Famous Airplanes of the World(Japanese language)" but it would be quite a long way for you to be competitive with Wayne. He knows about the Japanese aircrafts better than the Japanese. I have already given up and go on my way
David Aiken
He has been a friend of mine since 2004 but I didn't know he is such a great writer
Thanks for your information, Wayne.
Matter of fact, in '39, the Japanese were in Manchuria pushing up against the eastern borders of Soviet Russia. The Japanese were anticipating a war with Russia, not the U.S. at that time. The non-aggression pact between Germany and Russia plus the U.S. export restrictions changed alot of things...
.... now we know that the face of the Pacific war .......
To carry this further, now we know that the face of the Pacific war would have been drastically different if Pearl was invated in '39. Just for the sake of discussion and to carry this a little further before this thread is dead. What if Japan, tired of waring with China and looking for easier prey to show a measure of success for its people, mean while wanting to expand its borders, Pulls out of China and decides to start taking islands? Starting with Hawaii in '39.
Hawaii would not be the first, Hawaii is worth nothing to Japan.
Now in July 1940, they could take Indonesia over "for protection" or something like that.