A side-by-side of two museum-grade prints — specs, prices, and finish options compared so you can pick one, or hang both as a matched gallery pair.
| Attribute | A6M5 Zero — Aircraft Cutaway | F-2A — Aircraft Cutaway |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Mitsubishi Heavy Industries | Mitsubishi Heavy Industries |
| Country | Japan | Japan |
| Operator | Japan | Japan |
| Era | WW2 | Modern |
| Year | 1943 | 2000 |
| Variant | A6M5 Model 52 | F-2A |
| Lineage | A6M2 → A6M5 Model 52 reinforced wing and exhaust stacks | FS-X programme → F-16 derivative → F-2A shien sentōki |
| From | $49 | $49 |
Hinomaru red on the left and a Sakae cylinder row on the right — the A6M5 Zero earns rank-twenty-three cutaway drama because Mitsubishi's carrier fighter ruled the Pacific sky long enough to become the silhouette every Allied pilot learned to respect before the type's agility advantage finally met American horsepower and armour.
Blue sea-camouflage on the left and an enlarged-wing rib cage on the right — the F-2A earns rank-eighty-five cutaway authority because Mitsubishi took the Viper formula, stretched the wing for anti-ship stores, and let the hinomaru speak louder than any block-number spreadsheet.
Hung together at matching size, A6M5 Zero — Aircraft Cutaway and F-2A — Aircraft Cutaway read as one collection. Pick your sizes and frames on each print.