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Corky Scott wrote:
Much great stuff snipped When the model D Mustang was initially introduced, pilots complained about it being more unstable than the B. That was because the fuselage had been cut down and a bubble canopy installed instead of the earlier turtledeck. This changed fuselage actually diminished top speed somewhat and caused some instability. The engineers then added the dorsal fin to the front of the rudder which is now considered one of the signal visual characteristics of the model D. Corky Scott Hi Corky, Excellent post. I used to believe the above: that the dorsal fin was added to the D model only, and it was because the fuselage was cut down. that's what all the books said. However recent reading of some T.O.'s issued at the time show this may actually not be the case: Several crash reports tell of P-51B's and C's crashing because the horizontal stab was torn off during maneuvering. The report says: "Unless a dorsal fin is installed on the P-51B, P-51C, and P-51D airplanes, a snap roll may result when attempting a slow roll. The horizontal stabilizer will not withstand the effects of a Snap Roll. To prevent recurrence the stabilizer should be reinforced in accordance with T.O. 01-60J-18 dated 8 April 1944 and a dorsal fin should be installed. Dorsal fin kits are being made available to overseas activities" A previous entry for another crash: Sections II and III of T.O. 01-60J-18 had not been accomplished. The stabilizer was approximately 20 percent below the strength of a completely reinforced stabilizer. It is believed that this type of failure will be completely eliminated after compliance with T.O 01-60J-18 and the installation of a Dorsal Fin and reverse rudder bost tab." A Supplement to Basic Technical Order (From old Hap himself) says: "1. Due to horizontal stabilizer failures which are believed to have resulted form slow rolls, all P-51B, P-51C an dP-51D airplanes wil not perfomr slow rolls pending the installation of dorsal fin and rudder reverse trim tab, and compliance with T.O. No. 01-60J-18." Part of this T.O. 01-60J-18, it seems, was to "...use 1/4" rivets rather than 3/16" to attach the elevator outboard and rudder upper hinge fittings, ....to stabilizer ribs, providing additonal shear strength....." The date of 01-60J-18 is 15 January 1945. By that time maybe most production 51's were D's (Don't know that for sure), so it would SEEM as if the Dorsal was added for the D's only. Also, I guess that drillingout the rivet holes to take the larger rivets didn't weaken the riveted pieces any - they must have had enough meat left over. Also you can see photos of P-51B's or C's with the dorsal fin: http://www.mustangsmustangs.net/p-51...tary/eto/6.jpg http://images.google.com/imgres?imgu...% 3D%26sa%3DN Scroll down til you see photos of T9 CK -- Saville Replicas of 15th-19th century nautical navigational instruments: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/backstaffhome.html Restoration of my 82 year old Herreshoff S-Boat sailboat: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/SBOATrestore.htm Steambending FAQ with photos: http://home.comcast.net/~saville/Steambend.htm |
#2
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You guys are amazing...Thanks for the great history lesson Corky and Gregg
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