P-51 MUSTANG (The Fotofax series/Warbirds)
Prix régulier 30,00 € TTC 6%
Characteristics
ISBN-10 | 185409033X |
Book cover finish(es) | Perfect paperback |
Condition | Very Good |
Author(s) | Jeffrey L. Ethell |
Publisher | Arms and Armour Press |
Number of pages | 48 |
Published date | 1990 |
Language(s) | English |
Collection / Series | Warbirds fotofax |
Size | 19 x 24,5 x 0.5 cm |
Categorie(s) | • AVIATION MILITAIRE • APPAREILS - CONSTRUCTEURS |
Description
Sired by the English out of an American mother, said Assistant US Air Attaché in London, Major Thomas Hitchcock, in 1942 The North American P-51 Mustang, against strong odds, emerged at the end of the Second World War as perhaps the finest all-round piston-engine fighter in service.
During the first months of the war the British and French renewed their efforts to purchase US-built aircraft, settling on the Curtis P-40. Lieutenant Benjamin S. Kelsey, head of the US Army Air Corps' Pursuit Projects Office at Wright Field, and his boss, Colonel Oliver P. Echols, regretted this since it would push a new fighter, the XP-46, off the assembly lines. Air Corps commander General H. H. 'Hap' Arnold decided he could not spare the four months' lag in production to change from the P-40 to the P-46—if America were drawn into the war quantity would be drastically needed.