Mitsubushi made the Zero and Betty bomber, among others. Nakajima made some torpedo/dive bombers. Kawasaki made some fighters.
Yes he made many planes Yes he made many planes
During the attack on Pearl Harbor 29 of 360 Japanese planes were shot down. Only a few US planes made it in the air, so most Japanese planes were shot down by the sailors on the vessels in the harbor. The Japanese lost nine aircraft in the first attack wave and twenty in the second.
They lacked self sealing fuel tanks and armored protection for the pilot and crew.
Yes
they were mostly made of metal
Most planes were made of aluminium, but not all. One of the finest planes in WW2 was a fighter-bomber made entirely of wood. Powered by two Rolls-Royce 'Merlin' engines, the de Havilland "Mosquito" flew higher and faster than any other plane at the time. There were a few other wooden planes made during WW2.
1000 by all countries
Plane interments.
The Zero was a type of Japanese fighter plane, the Mitsubishi A6-M. It was fast and nimble, and heavily armed. At the start of the war it was better than the fighter planes the Allies had. But, it lacked any armor for the pilot or self-sealing fuel tanks, which made it vulnerable. By the end of the war the newer Allied fighter planes were better than the Zero.
there were 600 and 20 thuder bolt planes made in world war 2 and 220 crashed so that only leaves 400 left unless they have made more
Japan had made territorial gains during the Sino-Japanese War of 1894 & the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.
The first radio control planes were made in the late nineteenth century where they were flown as a musical hall act around the auditorium for the customers during the show.