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Home Base: Peachtree City, GA
Operation: Central and Eastern USA
Model: A6M2 Zero (Replica)
Wing Span:
42' 0"
Length: 29' 8"
Height: 11' 9"
Max Speed: 228 knots
Gross Weight: 5,858 lbs
Power Plant: Pratt & Whitney R-1340-AN1
Horsepower: 600
Fuel Capacity: 140 gallons
Armament: 2 x 7.7mm machine guns, 2 x 20 mm cannons.

Jack Van Ness' Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero (Replica)



Jack Van Ness
is the owner and operator of this Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero (Replica) which is available for airshows, flybys and film.

Jack's Zero Replica (N7757) is probably best described as a "Movie Star". She owes her existence to the 20th Century Fox movie company who in 1968 needed Japanese airplanes for the filming of their epic film, Tora! Tora! Tora!, which portrays events leading to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor December 7, 1941.

One of the most significant aircraft in the Japanese Navy was the A6M2 "Zero", also known as a "Zeke", a fighter aircraft whose performance was so superior to anything in the United States inventory, and perhaps the world, that the Japanese Empire was confident they could control the entire Pacific with their air superiority. While over 10,000 Zeros were produced, their losses during the war, and the requirement included in the Japanese Surrender Agreement signed in August 1945 that all of Japan's offensive weapons be destroyed, made unavailable any authentic Japanese war planes for documentary and film product.

20th Century Fox commissioned to have readily available American warbirds converted to closely resemble those of the Japanese Navy. N7757 started life as a Harvard Mark IV, a Canadian version of the venerable North American T-6 advanced trainer. The attention to detail in the conversion to an A6M2-21 Zero included the addition of 7.7mm machine guns over the engine cowl, a 20mm canon on each wing, and a cockpit canopy modified to the specifications of the original Zero. Even the detail of adding the three bladed prop, a tail arresting hook and converting the formerly fixed tail wheel to a fully functional retractable tail wheel were accomplished. The final product so closely resembles the Japanese Zero of WWII, in both size and form, only a trained eye can tell the difference.

In addition to the film Tora! Tora! Tora!, N7757 also appears in the films Midway and War and
Remembrance, and all episodes of the TV series, Baa, Baa, Black Sheep. Television and video documentary appearances include Yesterday’s Warbirds Today, and the Japanese feature production, "Zero". Until 2004, N7757 remained in California performing her "movie/TV star" duties, appearing at air shows and as part of a flying WWII museum. The Zero also appeared in the 2006 History Channel presentation of the documentary "Days that Shook the World". It was also the cover photo on the 2nd July Issue of Trade-A-Plane.

Purchased in 2004 by retired airline Captain, S. J. "Jack" Van Ness, and equipped with a new engine, N7757 is now on display at the Commemorative Air Force Dixie Wing Hangar/Museum at Falcon Field in Peachtree City, Georgia.

For more information: www.japanesezero.net.

Photo Gallery

Contact

Japanese Zero Airshows
Attn: Jack Van Ness
826 Gary Summers Road
Senoia, GA 30276

Phone: (770) 599-1355
Fax: (770) 599-3171

 


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