[Duel 82] • B-29 Superfortress vs Ki-44 "Tojo"
![[Duel 82] • B-29 Superfortress vs Ki-44 "Tojo"](/cover/aKNHw5u4wB1c9YyU/big/[Duel%2082]%20%e2%80%a2%20B-29%20Superfortress%20vs%20Ki-44%20%22Tojo%22.jpg)
- Authors
- Nijboer, Donald
- Publisher
- Osprey Publishing (UK)
- Tags
- history
- Date
- 2017-10-19T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 25.07 MB
- Lang
- en
By the time the Americans began their aerial bombardment of Japan in 1944, both the JAAF and IJNAF were spent forces. What the Japanese did have though was the Ki-44 "Tojo." Armed with two 40 mm cannon, it was the most heavily armed and feared single-seat fighter to see action against the new American bomber, the B-29 Superfortress. For the bomber crews, they had what they believed was their 'ace in hole' a fully armed B-29 carried four remotely operated gun turrets and a tail gunner's position, making it the world's most advanced self-defending bomber.
In every respect the Ki-44 pilots were fighting a desperate battle. Many who made their mark did so using suicidal ramming attacks or "taiatari." Illustrated with full colour artwork, this volume examines why the Ki-44 was unable to break up bomber formations conventionally during the Pacific War, and how its ramming tactics, while terrifying, graphically revealed Japan's inability to stop the B-29.