History

The Kawanishi N1K1 was one of few successful fighter floatplanes to be designed and constructed. However, by the time it entered service the role for which it had been designed no longer existed and only 97 were manufactured.

In September 1940 the Japanese Navy issued specifications for a floatplane fighter capable of supporting offensive naval operations.

The resulting Kawanishi aeroplane was almost as fast and manoeuvrable as the land based Mitsubishi A6M (Zero).

The prototype flew in May 1942 but necessary modifications meant production aeroplanes did not become available until July 1943.

They provided aerial defence for Balikpapan, Borneo and also flew in defence of the homeland from Lake Biwa, the largest freshwater lake on the Japanese Home Island in Shiga Prefecture, West Central Honshu North east of Kyoto.

This model represents a N1K1 in service with the Sasebo Kokutai (Sa-132) in September 1944.

Tamiya 1/48 kit with a mix of kit and Aeromaster decals, painted in Modelmaster enamels with scratch built decals. The salt weathering method used, completed by Wayne in about 1998.

Data

MODEL: Kawanishi N1J1 (Wayne Eagles Gallery)

ROLE: floatplane fighter

TIME PERIOD: 1942-1945

ENGINES: one 1400hp Mitsubishi MK4C Kasei radial piston engine

WING SPAN: 12m

LENGTH: 10.59m

MAXIMUM TAKE OFF WEIGHT: 3715kg

MAXIMUM SPEED: 490km/h

RANGE: 1050km

CREW: 1

ARMAMENT: two 7.7mm machine guns and two 20mm cannon

SCALE: 1/48

KIT:

GALLERIES:

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