Tuesday, 4 August 2020

IJAAF & IJNAF wrecked aircraft #42 - Mukden, Manchuria

A most interesting and rare video today from Getty, here,
According to the caption:

"Wrecked Japanese warplanes in Mukden, Manchuria, after World War II
Pan across wrecked and abandoned Japanese warplanes / group of men walking along road in front of wrecked and abandoned planes / close view of wrecked plane / four shots of wrecked planes / US serviceman walking past wrecked planes / same man getting up on plane and looking into cockpit / Note: exact day not known"

A number of IJAAF aircraft types can be seen in the video but the majority is Manpi Ki-79, single and two-seaters, and Tachikawa Ki-55 trainers.










Also, here's an extra photo, again from Getty, of a Kokusai Ki-86 (a Japanese copy of the Bücker Bü 131 "Jungmann") belonging to the Mukden branch of the Koku Shikan Gakko (Army Air Academy) and a Ki-55 trainer in the background.

Honza78 left a comment and asked: 
Question, can you decipher the inscription on the Ki-86 rudder?
Since you asked, I located two more photos of the same aircraft.
One from here:
and the other from here:
Only a part of the aircraft name is visible "げつこ" which doesn't mean anything in Japanese without at least one more hiragana. It could be "げっこう" (moonlight) like the well-known IJNAF night fighter type.
In the second photo the full inscription should be visible but, unfortunately, the photo is not clear enough to see anything.

6 comments:

  1. Brendan McGovern5 August 2020 at 09:14

    In photo #8, the tail with "96" on it has an interesting whorled pattern. The underwing camo on the Ki-76 is interesting as well.

    Best wishes,
    Brendan McGovern

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  2. Japanese copy of Bü 131 is Ki-86, not Ki-76.

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  3. Thanks for spotting the typo.

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  4. Great as always.
    Question, can you decipher the inscription on the Ki-86 rudder?

    ReplyDelete
  5. You have my endless admiration !! Thank you so much for the great response!

    ReplyDelete