Bomber_12th
SOH-CM-2025
Thank you Tom, I really appreciate it and it means a lot, especially coming from you! All of the credit for the flight model goes to Albert, having secured some time, over a number of different occasions, with Peter Teichman, and being able to load up the sim and have him test out some things himself and see what felt right and what may have felt wrong - this too expanded to the sounds.
Speaking of which, Peter Teichman and his guys have been going through "Jumpin Jacques" this spring, to return the cockpit to full original stock condition (something that he spoke about with us early last year), consulting the same NAA drawings and documents that I have used for the Warbirdsim products, and the P-51 research community I'm involved with. This extends to the point of wanting to get the K-14 installation just right, to match the earlier installation (perhaps field-modded), with early parts, rather than the late position and parts (often recreated) that wouldn't be correct to the aircraft. As they began digging into the cockpit, they found a lot of the original factory applied interior green paint still intact, as well as some original factory applied stencils and decals (the aircraft has never been completely stripped down since WWII, and has been restored section by section, over time, so as to enable it to fly during each air show season - much of the skins have never been removed since being originally riveted on at the NAA factory). The various switch panels and instrument panel are being reproduced to match the specific P-51D-20-NA it was manufactured as, without the tail warning radar, and (I think) without the rocket controls/supported wing.
http://hangar11.co.uk/news.html
Speaking of which, Peter Teichman and his guys have been going through "Jumpin Jacques" this spring, to return the cockpit to full original stock condition (something that he spoke about with us early last year), consulting the same NAA drawings and documents that I have used for the Warbirdsim products, and the P-51 research community I'm involved with. This extends to the point of wanting to get the K-14 installation just right, to match the earlier installation (perhaps field-modded), with early parts, rather than the late position and parts (often recreated) that wouldn't be correct to the aircraft. As they began digging into the cockpit, they found a lot of the original factory applied interior green paint still intact, as well as some original factory applied stencils and decals (the aircraft has never been completely stripped down since WWII, and has been restored section by section, over time, so as to enable it to fly during each air show season - much of the skins have never been removed since being originally riveted on at the NAA factory). The various switch panels and instrument panel are being reproduced to match the specific P-51D-20-NA it was manufactured as, without the tail warning radar, and (I think) without the rocket controls/supported wing.
http://hangar11.co.uk/news.html





