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Nippon (aircraft)

Nippon (ニッポン, Nippon) was a converted Mitsubishi G3M2 Model 21 bomber operated by the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper and used to make a round-the-world flight in 1939.

The round the World flight

Nippon took off from Haneda airport[2] in the district of Kamata in Tokyo on 25 August 1939, flew around the globe and returned to Tokyo, after 55 days, on 20 October 1939 having flown 52,886 km (32,862 mi; 28,556 nmi) in 194 flying hours.

The aircraft

Nippon had the armament removed, was equipped with the latest autopilot and could carry 5,200 L of fuel enabling it to fly continuously for 24 hours.[citation needed]

Flight course

Tokyo - Chitose - Nome, Alaska - Fairbanks, USA - Whitehorse - Seattle - Oakland, USA - Los Angeles - Albuquerque, USA - Chicago - New York - Washington D.C - Miami - San Salvador, El Salvador - Cali, Colombia - Lima - Arica - Santiago - Buenos Aires - Santos (Brazil) - Dakar - Casablanca Morocco - Seville, Spain - Rhodos, Greece - Basra (Iraq) - Karachi - Kolkata, India - Bangkok - Taipei - Haneda, Tokyo

Specifications (Mitsubishi G3M2 Model 21)

Data from The Mitsubishi G3M "Nell";[3] Imperial Japanese Navy Bombers of World War Two;[1][4][5]

General characteristics

Performance

Occupants

There were seven occupants in total.

Captain
Sumitoshi NAKAO 中尾純利
Flight engineer
Hajime SHIMOKAWA 下川一
Communication operator
Nobusada SATO 佐藤信貞
Pilot
Shigeo YOSHIDA 吉田重雄
Professional Engineer
Hiroshi SAEKI 佐伯弘
Flight engineer
Nagasaku YAOKAWA 八尾川長作
Ambassador of goodwill
Takeo OHARA 大原武夫, Aerial director of Mainichi Shimbun.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Francillon 1979, pp. 350–357
  2. ^ now Tokyo International Airport
  3. ^ Francillon 1967, p. 16.
  4. ^ Francillon 1969, p. 64.
  5. ^ Francillon 1979, p. 357

References

External links