Nakajima Ki43 Hayabusa / Oscar  WS-147

Nakajima Ki43 Hayabusa / Oscar

Product code WS-147

Nakajima

€ 22.89

 

Series Warpaint Series No 147

Publisher/Brand Hall Park

Author Daniel Kowalczuk

Format a4

No. Pages 72

Version Soft cover

Language English

Category Aviationbooks

Subcategory WW2 » WW2 Japanese Aircraft

Availability Temporarily Out of Stock.

Click here to be notified when this product becomes available again

Add this product to my wishlist

This product was added to our database on Monday 28 April 2025.

Your reliable Aviation Book Source since 1989


Also in this series:
ProductPublisher/BrandSeries/scalePrice €
Boeing B52A-F Stratofortress ws-132Boeing B52A-F StratofortressHall ParkWarpaint Series No 132€ 27.48
Consolidated B24 Liberator WS-96Consolidated B24 LiberatorHall ParkWarpaint Series No 96€ 29.31
de Havilland (Canada) DHC-2 Beaver ws-139de Havilland (Canada) DHC-2 BeaverHall ParkWarpaint Series No 139€ 20.14
Douglas C54/R5D Skymaster & DC-4 ws-109Douglas C54/R5D Skymaster & DC-4Hall ParkWarpaint Series No 109€ 21.06
F4 Phantom US Navy, US Marine Corps and RAF F4J(UK) ws-114F4 Phantom US Navy, US Marine Corps and RAF F4J(UK)Hall ParkWarpaint Series No 115€ 27.48
Grumman F14 Tomcat ws-126Grumman F14 TomcatHall ParkWarpaint Series No 126€ 27.48
McDonnell Douglas F4K and F4M Phantom ws-31McDonnell Douglas F4K and F4M PhantomHall ParkWarpaint Series No 31€ 17.39
Mirage F1 WS-142Mirage F1Temporarily Out of Stock.Hall ParkWarpaint Series No 142€ 20.14
North American OV10 Bronco ws-140North American OV10 BroncoHall ParkWarpaint Series No 140€ 30.23
Supermarine Walrus WS-39Supermarine WalrusHall ParkWarpaint Series No 39€ 13.72

Product description

One of the great unsung fighters of the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force was Nakajima's Ki-43 Hayabusa (Peregrine Falcon). Codenamed 'Oscar' by the Allies, the aircraft was frequently mistaken for the Navy's A6M2 Zero by those encountering it in combat, to the extent that it was widely referred to by its adversaries as the 'Army 0'.

Highly regarded in Japan, where it was much more widely recognised than the Zero, the Ki-43 was the only Japanese fighter from the Pacific War to see active service with other air forces, being supplied to both Thailand and Manchukuo by the Japanese, but also seeing use by France in Indochina, and by the air forces of Indonesia, the Republic of China, and North Korea, who pressed abandoned but airworthy airframes into service, some of which survived into the early 1950s.

Author Daniel Kowalczuk has compiled a compelling narrative that puts the aircraft in context, describes its development and active service history in detail, and explains how it came to be so widely regarded by the Japanese-so much so that it is the aircraft of choice for producers of Anime rather than its better known contemporary