Scholz, old friend, you're barking up the wrong tree here. The 1939-42 Japanese pilots took on pilots from Russia, China, England, the US, Holland, Australia and probably some others I can't think of, and handily beat them all. They were superb pilots in superb equipment. As someone mentioned, their glory lasted only through the end of 1942, and after that most of them were gone.
- oldman
As I suggested in another thread, read the book "Fire in the Skies - the Air war in the south Pacific". In fact the Zero was an amazing fighter, while it might of been slow, it out turned and out gunned anything we had available. The problem wasn't the aircraft, when the pilots ran out - they ran out. Secondly the Japanese had no idea of Logistics. For example at WeWak there were 6 Ki-43 fighters that were broken down, 5 could of been put back into combat service if they gutted one plane, the one that crashed and flipped over killing the pilot - it was a total loss. Were the Japanese mechanics able to use ingenuity to fit it? Nope. That one plane belongs to the emperor, that mechanic has no right to mess with it, only to wait for spare parts for 6 planes. On the other hand, the Americans - Torpedo squadron 8 (What was left of them from the Midway disaster) went to Guadalcanal with 8 planes (TBF now). On the first night the runway was blasted by the Japanese battleships and all were destroyed. American Ingenuity - the Air boss decided to rip apart two F4F's and three TBM's, taking a wing from one, Tail from another etc and patched together ONE aircraft. Nobody would fly it, so the airboss took off with 8x 100lb bombs and headed towards artillery positions.
Some how the plane took off and few a few missions before it unfortunately crashed on the runway on its final mission breaking apart. The Japanese had a fine fighter for 1940-1942, problem was they had no R&D into an upgrade, the A6M3 wasn't a good replacement or upgrade - the Zero basically could not be upgraded as the 109 was. The Spitfire and P-47 were able to be upgraded eventually with better guns and bigger engine, the 109 still suffered from a good engine but hardly any weapons - plagued the design for the duration of the war. Same for the Zero.