Celebrate 75 years of the iconic World War II warbird that helped win the war and flew into the heart of American life. From D-Day to the Battle of the Bulge, through reconnaissance missions and combat, fighting flying bombs and Me 262 Stormbird jets, P-51 Mustang pilots saw it all during World War II. P-51 Mustang celebrates the 75th anniversary of the most iconic American warbird written by Cory Graff, lead curator at the Flying Heritage Collection--one of the world's most important collections and sites for warbird restoration. The entire story of this plane is here, starting with the astonishing fact that the P-51 Mustang was built in less than 120 days. This first version was hardly a world-beater, and it took the addition of a Rolls-Royce-designed Merlin to make the Mustang a legend. These nimble and versatile fighters were able to escort Allied heavy bombers all the way to Berlin and back. In the Pacific, their long-range ability was pushed to its limit, with pilots flying 1,500-mile, eight-or-more-hour missions over water to attack Tokyo. On the home front, Graff profiles the impact manufacturing Mustangs had on workers in Los Angeles and Dallas. The United States wasn't finished with the P-51 Mustang after World War II. It was used in the Korean War and, afterwards, as a symbol and icon of American ingenuity. Graff explores the post-World War II history of this iconic plane, making this a book that every single World War II, history, and aviation enthusiast will want to buy.
But make one mistake or have one touch of bad luck, and you had a very good chance of ending up dead. This book tells the little-known story of these brave men and their efforts to defeat the aerial forces defending Japan.
While the introduction of the Merlin engine did improve the Mustang's performance and produce the bubble-canopied fighters with which we associate the name, credit must be given to the Allison-engined variants that preceded it.
The North American P-51 Mustang was one of the most successful and effective fighter aircraft of all time.
In addition to flight-test reports, combat reports, personal correspondence between the author and former pilots, war diaries, and other documentation, the following published works and articles were consulted during the writing of this ...
Col Patrick W. Timberlake, Chief, Production Engineering Section, Materiel Division, objected to the order (presumably with Echols' blessing), ...
Looks at the design and development history of the P-51 Mustang fighter plane.
Elmer W. Marr, John M. Olson, Paul E. Marshall. ... Robert B. Pen rod, Dan McCord, John T. Peters, Ronald M. McCord, William A. Phillipy, Peter R. McCorkle, Quentin G. Phipps. ... Helen M. Turner. E. C. Schauer, Col William A. Turner.
“Muncie, Indiana,” someone called through the fading laughter. It was only a moment before one of the screens lit up with a colorful radar weather map. “The weather in Muncie is clear,” SIERRA SUE II 149.
This book takes the modeller from the aircraft's beginnings to the ultimate manifestation of this elegant and deadly bird, the F-82 G/H Twin Mustang.
This paperback book will provide a vital missing link in the saga of this famed World War II aircraft, and is sure to become a valued addition to the libraries of P-51 modelers, historians, enthusiasts, and pilots in both the United States ...