After completing a period of restoration that included replacement of pop rivets with flush rivets and application of a new paint job, the museum’s popular A6M-2 Type 0 carrier fighter, known as the Zero or Zeke (wartime Allied codename), has returned to its customary place on the museum floor. For months tour guides leading visitors around the museum have missed it positioned off the atrium at the entrance to the museum’s west wing. Literally nose-to-nose with an F4F Wildcat, the aircraft formed part of a perfect backdrop for introducing the Pacific War, contrasting the ruggedness of the Grumman Iron Works fighter with the maneuverability of the Zero and sharing the story of Jimmy Thach’s weave maneuver that helped give Wildcat pilots an upper hand in air-to-air combat. Now the Zero looks factory fresh with an overall green paint scheme, yellow fuselage stripe and bright circular red hinomarus characteristic of the middle to late period of the Pacific War.