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→‎Notes: attempted kandex translation, historical info
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零戦より前に実戦配備されていた旧型機ですが、優れた格闘戦能力を持っています。<br>
 
零戦より前に実戦配備されていた旧型機ですが、優れた格闘戦能力を持っています。<br>
 
武装や航続力、速度の点で既に二線級ではありますが、防空戦闘には活用可能です。
 
武装や航続力、速度の点で既に二線級ではありますが、防空戦闘には活用可能です。
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''This is a legacy carrier-based fighter.<br>
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Although it's an older machine that was fully deployed before the Zero-fighter, it has exemplary aerial combat performance.<br>
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With armament and cruising capacity, its speed is now second class, but is still possible leverage in aerial defense combat.''
    
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Buildable.
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Buildable. Standard fighter complement of most [[List of light aircraft carriers by upgraded maximum stats|light carriers]].
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== Historical Information ==
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The predecessor of the infamous Mitsubishi A6M ''Zero'', the '''Mitsubishi A5M''' (''Type 96 Carrier-based fighter,'' Allied reporting name "Claude") was the world's first ship-based monoplane fighter.
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Developed by a team led by Jiro Horikoshi (who would go on to head development of the [[Type 21 Zero Fighter|A6M]] and [[Reppuu (Strong Gale)|A7M]]) to the 1934 ''9-shi'' specification for an advanced fighter plane, the Mitsubishi ''Ka-14'' competed with Nakajima's prototype. The first prototype which flew in February 1935, was an all-metal-airframe low-wing fighter using an inverted gull wing and fixed undercarriage powered by Nakajima's 600hp ''Kotobuki 5'' engine.
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Requirements of the ''Type 9'' specification were a top speed of 350km/h at 3,000m with the capability of climbing to 5,000m in 6.5 minutes, and the Ka-14's performance greatly surpassed all requirements, with a maximum speed of 450km/h while being quite maneuverable. An aerodynamically revised design with conventional wings was ordered into production as the Mitsubishi ''A5M''.
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It was introduced in 1936 and entered service in early 1937 as the A5M1 armed with twin 7.7mm machine guns, soon facing combat at the start of the second Sino-Japanese war. Contempoary opponents such as the Boeing P-26C ("Peashooters") and the Curtiss Hawk Ⅲ, were poorly matched against the A5M, which proved effective and resistant to damage. A5Ms also served as escorts for the Mitsubishi G3M bombers.
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Mitsubishi's development team continued to improve the A5M up to the final A5M4, with improvements such as a more powerful engine, additional drop-fuel-tank and closed cockpits. Altogether 1,083 A5Ms were manufactured by Mitsubishi, Watanabe and Naval Ohmura Arsenal, including 103 two-seat trainers.
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The A5M series continued in service after 1941, but had been replaced by the A6M as the standard fighter of first-line carriers. The last battle of the A5Ms as fighters was the Battle of the Coral Sea in May 1942. As World War II came to a close, most remaining A5Ms were repurposed as kamikaze aircraft.
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
 
[[wikipedia:Mitsubishi A5M|Mitsubishi A5M]]
 
[[wikipedia:Mitsubishi A5M|Mitsubishi A5M]]
 
{{Equipmentlist}}
 
{{Equipmentlist}}
 
[[Category:Equipment]]
 
[[Category:Equipment]]
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