Pacific Profiles Volume 13 presents the most accurate wartime profiles and
histories to date of Imperial Japanese Navy bombers, transports, flying boats
and miscellaneous types which served in the South Pacific.
The Pacific Profiles series presents the most accurate WWII profiles of Allied
and Japanese aircraft which served throughout the Australia, New Guinea and
Solomons theatres. This Volume 15 covers the B-26 and US Navy JM Marauder
series which served in these theatres from their first delivery to Australia
in April 1942 until the war’s end.
The Pacific Profiles series presents the most accurate WWII profiles of Allied
and Japanese aircraft which served throughout Australia, New Guinea and the
South Pacific. This Volume 14 covers those B-25, PBJ & F-10 Mitchell models
which served in these theatres from March 1942 until the end of the war.
Pacific Profiles Volume 10 covers the P-47D Thunderbolt which flew combat
missions in the New Guinea theatre until mid-1945, serving with a total of
eleven Fifth Air Force USAAF combat squadrons, Fifth Fighter Command and the
Combat Replacement Training Center.
Pacific Profiles Volume 12 covers the P-51 and F-6 Mustang series which served
in New Guinea, the Philippines and then the Japanese islands, serving with a
total of ten USAAF Fifth Air Force fighter and reconnaissance squadrons, and
also with New Guinea’s Combat Replacement Training Centre.
Pacific Profiles Volume 11 covers the P-40 Warhawk series, which served with a
dozen USAAF Fifth and Thirteenth Air Force fighter and reconnaissance
squadrons, service units, combat replacement pools and other miscellaneous
units.
This book details the exploits of the highly skilled Naval Aviators charged with achieving air supremacy over New Guinea in their A6M2/3 Zero-sens. The combat record of the Zero-sen in New Guinea has mostly been overstated, with little due being given to the constraining conditions under which the fighter operated. The air combats fought over New Guinea in 1942 between Imperial Japanese Naval Air Force (IJNAF) pilots and their Allied counterparts in P-39 Airacobras and P-40 Warhawks were often 'trial and error' affairs, with both belligerents being caught out by weather. This study covers the key role played by governing factors including geography and climatic conditions, and examines the modified tactics employed by IJNAF Zero-sen pilots to help them cope in-theatre through the comprehensive analysis of RAAF, USAAF and Japanese operational after action reports. Using first-hand accounts from both famous aviators and previously unknown RAAF and Japanese pilots, and specially commissioned artwork, leading South Pacific historian and author Michael John Claringbould sheds new light on the air war fought over the wilds of New Guinea during the course of 1942.
Volume Eight of the Pacific Profiles series presents the most accurate
profiles and histories to date of Imperial Japanese Navy floatplanes which
served in the South Pacific theatre, throughout New Guinea and the Solomons.