
Historical Information | ||||||||
Caption | Japanese Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Saburo Sakai in the cockpit of his A5M fighter, Hankou, Hubei Province, China, 1939 ww2dbase | |||||||
WW2-Era Location Name | Hankou, Hubei, China | |||||||
Date | 1939 | |||||||
Photographer | Unknown | |||||||
Source Information | ||||||||
Source | ww2dbaseWikimedia Commons | |||||||
Link to Source | Link | |||||||
Related Content | ||||||||
More on... |
| |||||||
Licensing Information | ||||||||
Licensing | This work originating in Japan is in the public domain. According to Article 23 of the 1899 Copyright Act of Japan and Article 2 of Supplemental Provisions of Copyright Act of 1970, a work is in the public domain if it was created or published before 1 Jan 1957. Please contact us regarding any inaccuracies with the above information. Thank you. |
|||||||
Metadata | ||||||||
Added By | C. Peter Chen | |||||||
Photo Size | 1,488 x 944 pixels |
請考慮透過 Patreon 支持本站。任何數量都會有莫大幫助!感謝您的支持。 請幫助宣傳: 訂閱 WW2DB,掌握最新動態: |
Visitor Submitted Comments
2.
Bill says:
19 Dec 2011 09:43:42 AM
SKILLFULL FLYING: AGAINST THE ODDS
In the hands of an experienced combat pilot
the A6M Zero was still a deadly fighter. Saburo Sakai stumbled alone into a formation of fifteen US Navy F6F Hellcats during the defense of Iwo Jima in 1944.
Sakai returned to combat flying even with the loss of one eye, fought a running twenty
minute dogfight and skillfully maneuvered his zero, with ninety fifty caliber machine guns firing at him the Hellcats broke off combat.
Sakai returned to base after landing his ground crew inspected the zero and discovered not one bullet had hit his plane!
Sakai had 3200 flying hours with 1500 in the
Zero. Photograph of PO2/c Saburo Sakai taken in cockpit of his Mitsubishi A5M "Claude" fighter, Hankow, China 1939.
F6F Hellcat armed w/6xfifty caliber machine guns w/400rpg 2400rounds
A6M5c Zero armed w/2x7.7mm machine guns with
700rpg, 2x20mm cannons w/125rpg

19 Dec 2011 09:43:42 AM
SKILLFULL FLYING: AGAINST THE ODDS
In the hands of an experienced combat pilot
the A6M Zero was still a deadly fighter. Saburo Sakai stumbled alone into a formation of fifteen US Navy F6F Hellcats during the defense of Iwo Jima in 1944.
Sakai returned to combat flying even with the loss of one eye, fought a running twenty
minute dogfight and skillfully maneuvered his zero, with ninety fifty caliber machine guns firing at him the Hellcats broke off combat.
Sakai returned to base after landing his ground crew inspected the zero and discovered not one bullet had hit his plane!
Sakai had 3200 flying hours with 1500 in the
Zero. Photograph of PO2/c Saburo Sakai taken in cockpit of his Mitsubishi A5M "Claude" fighter, Hankow, China 1939.
F6F Hellcat armed w/6xfifty caliber machine guns w/400rpg 2400rounds
A6M5c Zero armed w/2x7.7mm machine guns with
700rpg, 2x20mm cannons w/125rpg
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.
查詢 WW2DB

最新消息
- » Wreck of Teruzuki Found (2025年7月27日)
- » USS Orlean's Bow Found (2025年7月22日)
- » The Emperor of Japan Planned to Honor WW2-era Japanese POWs in Mongolia (2025年7月4日)
- » US State Lawmaker John Winter Caught Using Racial Slur "Jap" and Apologized (2025年6月11日)
- » US Government Plans to Purge WW2 Information (2025年3月17日)
- » 所有最新消息
網站統計
- » 1,182 人物傳記
- » 337 事件
- » 45,119 時間軸條目
- » 1,249 軍艦
- » 350 飛機型號
- » 207 車輛型號
- » 376 兵器型號
- » 123 史料文件
- » 261 設施
- » 470 書評
- » 28,415 照片
- » 365 地圖
著名二戰名言
"Among the men who fought on Iwo Jima, uncommon valor was a common virtue."Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, 16 Mar 1945
11 Nov 2011 08:15:51 AM
SAMURAI:
Saburo Sakai had four victories in China
flying the A5M Claude, he later flew the Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter.
In 1937 he was among 1,500 men who applied for flight training, with the Imperial Japanese Navy, 70 had been selected for the training.
Sakai survived WWII after seven years of operational flying, 200 combat missions and 64 enemy aircraft shotdown. He was born on
August 16, 1916 and died September 22, 2000
he was 84 years old.
Meaning of the word Samurai: From the archaic
Japanese verb "Samorau" changed to "Saburau"
Meaning "To Serve"
Suggested Reading:
SAMURAI!
By Saburo Sakai
Publisher I Books, New edition January 2001
Paperback
ISBN: 0743412834