I began by wondering if any zeros of Bessel function of the first kind $J_m(x)$ were multiples of $\pi$. Having no real idea on how to answer that, I conjectured that the first several zeros wouldn't be (or else I would have heard about it), and so decided to do a numerical investigation.
Table[N[BesselJZero[0, n]/Pi, 100], {n, 1, 100}]
0.76547974956201235684194840406615
1.75709543501086983306413279034849
2.75456714702419669134233661494223
3.75336198521488396584959236737820
.
.
.
99.7501269680668222195941884899656
Here I truncated the results. Out of the first hundred zeros, none appeared to be a candidate multiple of $\pi$, but there was an interesting pattern.
For all but the first zero, I noticed that the mantissa began with the decimal digits $75$. More importantly, the zeros, when normalized by $pi$, appear almost evenly spaced. Any reason?