OK my friends... I stayed up late and finished up.
This is an aircraft of the 54th Sentai, 3rd Chutai a Ki-43-II and the personal mount of WO Akira Sugimoto. I had no idea if he or his aircraft had survived the war until I recently ran across this article.
On Jan. 7th 1945 he (Sugimoto) was flying solo from Fabrica, Negros Island in the Philippines when he spotted a flight of P-38s from the 475th fighter group patroling near the Japanese base of Manpata. The P-38s were piloted by Maj. Thomas McGuire the 2nd highest scoring P-38 ace (38 kills) and his wingman Capt.Edwin Weaver, and a third, Lt. Douglas Thorpp. (It should be told that this was an unauthorised flight meant to raise his tally) Sugimoto immediately attacked Capt. Weaver, damaging his plane, causing him to withdraw from the fight. While trying to manoeuvre behind Sugimoto at tree top level, and still carrying the nearly full long range external fuel tanks, Maj. McGuire's plane suddenly snap rolled onto its back and crashed into the jungle. Lt. Douglas Thorpp then caught Sugimoto in his sights and fired a burst into his "Oscar" damaging it sufficiently for the Japanese pilot to make a forced landing in the jungle just a few miles from where Maj. McGuire had crashed. WO Sugimoto survived the crash, but was set upon by the Filipino people they had brutilized since their occupation, and was hacked and shot to death while still strapped into his aircraft.
Thought this was an interesting story, and I had no idea it existed until I just happened across it while reading from a web page I found while researching the aircraft.
I hope I've done a good job to honor this pilot, and his mount, even though at the time the enemy of our country, it took alot of courgage to climb into the cockpit time after time, never knowing if it would be your last time, or if you would ever see your home and family again.
Thanks all...
Doug