Nakajima Aircraft Company

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox company

File:Chikuhei nakajima.jpg
Founder, Chikuhei Nakajima

The Template:Nihongo was a prominent Japanese aircraft manufacturer and aviation engine manufacturer throughout World War II. It continues as the car and aircraft manufacturer Subaru.

History

File:Assembly work at Nakajima-Handa.jpg
Assembly work at Nakajima-Handa

The Nakajima Aircraft company was Japan's first aircraft manufacturer, and was founded in 1918 by Chikuhei Nakajima, a naval engineer, and Seibei Kawanishi, a textile manufacturer, as Template:Nihongo3. In 1919, the two founders split and Nakajima bought out Nihon Aircraft's factory with tacit help from the Imperial Japanese Army. The company was renamed Nakajima Aircraft Company in 1919.<ref name="Odagiri-Goto">Template:Cite book</ref>

The company's manufacturing facilities were:

After World War II

After Japan's defeat in World War II, the company was forced to close, as the production and research of aircraft was prohibited by the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers. This had a severe impact on Nakajima as one of the two largest aircraft manufacturers in Japan; the second was Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI). Unlike MHI, Nakajima did not diversify into shipbuilding and general machinery, and so was forced to dissolve into a number of spin-off companies set up by its former managers, engineers, and workers. As a result, leading aeronautical engineers from the company, such as Ryoichi Nakagawa, helped transform Japan's automobile industry.<ref name="Odagiri-Goto"/>

The company was reborn in 1953 as Fuji Heavy Industries, maker of Fuji Rabbit scooters and Subaru automobiles, and as Fuji Precision Industries (later renamed Prince Motor Company, which merged with Nissan in August 1966), manufacturer of Prince Skyline and Prince Gloria automobiles. Fuji began aircraft production in the mid-1950s and produced military training aircraft and helicopters for the Japan Self-Defense Forces. In 2017, it rebranded as Subaru Corporation.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Products

File:B5N Type 97 Carrier Attack Bomber Kate B5N-25s.jpg
Nakajima B5N carrier attack bomber

Fighter

Trainer

Torpedo bomber

Scout and reconnaissance aircraft

Dive bomber

  • D2N
  • D3N - 1936 carrier-based dive bomber prototype based on the C3N and B5N, lost to the Aichi D3A

Heavy bomber

Transport

Army aircraft

File:Ki-43s and Ki-84s.jpg
Ki-43 Hayabusa and Ki-84 Hayate, Post-war

Fighter

Bomber

Reconnaissance

Transport

Trainer

Kamikaze aircraft

Jet prototypes

  • Template:Nihongo3 - 1945 Navy experimental land-based ground attack/ASW jet, two prototypes built; first Japanese jet aircraft

Civil aircraft

Aircraft engines

See also

References

Citations

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Bibliography

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  • Francillon, René J. Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War. London, Putnam & Company, 1970,1979. Template:ISBN.

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Template:Nakajima aircraft Template:Nakajima aeroengines Template:Subaru Corporation Template:Keiretsu Template:Authority control