P-1D Mustang
North American P-51D Mustang QI-T 44-15152
'JERSEY JERK'
361st F. S. 356th F. G. Major Don Strait CO, December 1944 / January 1945.
Declaring
the P-51D to be the best fighter he had flown, Chuck Yeager said "the
Mustang would do for eight hours what the Spitfire would do for forty-five
minutes".
The Mustang probably is the best fighter of all time; and it came about
because North American Aviation, when asked to build the Curtiss
P-40 under licence for the Royal Air Force, offered to produce something
better themselves in one hundred and twenty days. The resulting NA-73,
with its ground-breaking laminar wing, was initially powered by an Allison
engine; but what transformed it in to the ultimate fighter was the adoption
of the Rolls-Royce Merlin. In its final form this enabled the Mustang,
in its most recognisable P-51D form with the "bubble" canopy
for improved visibility, to reach Berlin from Britain and Tokyo from
island bases in the Pacific. It filled the roles of interceptor, bomber
escort, ground attack and reconnaissance, and was still in action in
the early V50s in the Korean conflict; and today it's probably the most
numerous flying "warbird".
Known as a "hard luck" group, with the worst loss/kill ratio
of any in the Eighth Air Force, the 356th FG exchanged its P-47Ds for
Mustangs in November 1944, applying the highly decorative group markings
of a red cowling with multiple blue diamonds. Those of the 351st squadron
were distinguished by red rudders, and it was this unit of which Major
Don Strait was the CO at the end of 1944. He scored 13.5 air-to-air
victories, of which 10.5 were in the Mustang; and the last three of
these were Fieseler Storches.
Scale 1:72 Wingspan 6.17" (156 mm) Base
size 6.37" (162 mm) square (No. 4)
Weight not including base 8.75 ozs (247 grams)
Total number of models produced 68