You're doing a great thing with this. And I'm so glad you were able to get your Dad his A-2.
Amazing photos. And keeping history alive with such obvious passion.
Seriously - well done to you. Bravo!
What's the scale of these Mustangs?
I'm guessing that scaling them down not only reduces build costs, but also reduces running costs because you can use a smaller engine but keep the same power to weight ratio as an original, and all the handling characteristics, but with lower take-off and landing speeds, which is really neat.
Speaking of engines, one on the FB page has got a RR cam covered engine. Is that the V8 out of a Shadow?
EDIT; It seems to be an inline 6 or a V-12. My bad.
Still anticipating the day I hear one of Merlins. I saw the Collings Foundation P-51 but I think it has a Packard engine. Not the same thing!
The BMW V12 in the Titan T-51B sounds just as sweet as a Merlin! Listen to it. It is on the Facebook page.
The Collings Foundation Mustang is a P-51C, with a Packard built Merlin engine. All P-51's had either Allison or Packard built engines. Made in the USA.
The Allison powered P-51's actually performed better at low altitudes. Where the Merlin came into it's own was above 24,000 feet. This is where the second blower had to be used. Fuel burn here is a minimum of 1 gallon per minute. If dog fighting, or doing acro work, the burn is 2 gallons per minute.
So there is a Packard Merlin engine? Never knew that.
The p-51s are very cool. I prefer the sound of the round engines. The F4-U Corsair is my favorite. My antique favorite would be the Staggerwing Beech. Like flying a Cadillac. TXFlyGuy, great project you have going. The best to you.