Here are some more images of Trumpeter Models 1/32 scale North American RAF Mustang III.
From Wikipedia"
In April 1942, the RAF's Air Fighting Development Unit
  (AFDU) tested the Mustang and found its performance inadequate at  
higher altitudes. As such, it was to be used to replace the Tomahawk in 
 Army Cooperation Command squadrons, but the commanding officer was so  
impressed with its maneuverability and low-altitude speeds that he  
invited Ronnie Harker from Rolls-Royce's
  Flight Test establishment to fly it. Rolls-Royce engineers rapidly  
realized that equipping the Mustang with a Merlin 61 engine with its  
two-speed two-stage supercharger would substantially improve performance
  and started converting five aircraft as the Mustang Mk X.
  Apart from the engine installation, which utilized custom-built engine
  bearers designed by Rolls-Royce and a standard 10 ft 9 in (3.28 m)  
diameter, four-bladed Rotol propeller from a Spitfire Mk IX,
  the Mustang Mk X was a straightforward adaptation of the Mustang Mk I 
 airframe, keeping the same radiator duct design. The Vice-Chief of the 
 Air Staff, Air Marshal Sir Wilfrid R. Freeman, lobbied vociferously for Merlin-powered Mustangs, insisting two of the five experimental Mustang Mk Xs be handed over to Carl Spaatz for trials and evaluation by the U.S. 8th Air Force in Britain. The high-altitude performance improvement was remarkable: the Mustang Mk X (serial number AM208) reached 433 mph (697 km/h) at 22,000 ft (6,700 m), and AL975 tested at an absolute ceiling of 40,600 ft (12,400 m).
Two XP-51B prototypeswere
  adapted from P-51 airframes; these were a more thorough conversion 
than  the Mustang X, with a tailor-made engine installation and a 
complete  redesign of the radiator duct. The airframe itself was 
strengthened,  with the fuselage and engine mount area receiving more 
formers because  of the greater weight of the Packard V-1650-3,
  1,690 lb (770 kg), compared with the Allison V-1710's 1,335 lb (606  
kg). The engine cowling was completely redesigned to house the Packard  
Merlin, which, because of the intercooler radiator mounted on the  
supercharger casing, was 5 in (130 mm) taller and used an updraught induction system, rather than the downdraught carburetor of the Allison. The new engine drove a four-bladed 11 ft 2 in (3.40 m) diameter Hamilton Standard propeller that featured cuffs of hard molded rubber.
  To cater for the increased cooling requirements of the Merlin a new  
fuselage duct was designed. This housed a larger radiator, which  
incorporated a section for the supercharger coolant, and, forward of  
this and slightly lower, an oil cooler was housed in a secondary duct  
which drew air through the main opening and exhausted via a separate  
exit flap.[
It
 was decided that the armament of the new P-51B (NA-102) would  
permanently omit the previously nose-mounted machine guns used on  
earlier P-51 versions, and only the four wing-mounted .50 in (12.7 mm)  
M2/AN Browning machine guns (with 350 rpg for the inboard guns and 280  
rpg for the outboard) of the P-51A would be used for its gun armament.  
The bomb rack/external drop tank installation, adapted from the A-36  
Apache attack version, would also be used; the racks were rated to be  
able to carry up to 500 lb (230 kg) of ordnance and were also capable of
  carrying drop tanks. The weapons were aimed using an N-3B optical  
gunsight fitted with an A-1 head assembly which allowed it to be used as
  a gun or bomb sight through varying the angle of the reflector glass.
  Pilots were also given the option of having ring and bead sights  
mounted on the top engine cowling formers. This option was discontinued 
 with the later P-51Ds.
The first XP-51B flew on 30 November 1942.
  Although flight tests confirmed the potential of the new fighter, with
  the service ceiling being raised by 10,000 feet and the top speed  
improving by 50 mph at 30,000 ft (9,100 m), it was soon discovered that 
 the radiator duct airflow was breaking up at high speeds, generating a 
 rumble as the exit shutter was closed. Testing at the Ames Aeronautical laboratory led to a redesign of the radiator scoop culminating in a forward slanted upper lip.
  After sustained lobbying at the highest level, American production was
  started in early 1943 with the P-51B (NA-102) being manufactured at  
Inglewood, California, and the P-51C (NA-103) at a new plant in Dallas, 
 Texas, which was in operation by summer 1943. The RAF named these models Mustang Mk III. In performance tests, the P-51B reached 441 mph (709.70 km/h) at 30,000 ft (9,100 m). In
 addition, the extended range made possible by the use of drop tanks  
enabled the Merlin-powered Mustang to be introduced as a bomber escort  
with a combat radius of 750 miles using two 75 gal tanks.
The
 range would be further increased with the introduction of an  85 gal 
(322 l) self-sealing fuel tank aft of the pilot's seat, starting  with 
the P-51B-5-NA series. When this tank was full, the center of gravity
  of the Mustang was moved dangerously close to the aft limit. As a  
result, maneuvers were restricted until the tank was down to about  25 
U.S. gal (95 l) and the external tanks had been dropped. Problems  with 
high-speed "porpoising" of the P-51Bs and P-51Cs with the fuselage  
tanks would lead to the replacement of the fabric-covered elevators with
  metal-covered surfaces and a reduction of the tailplane incidence. With the fuselage and wing tanks, plus two 75 gal drop tanks, the combat radius was now 880 miles.
Despite
 these modifications, the P-51Bs and P-51Cs, and the newer  P-51Ds and 
P-51Ks, experienced low-speed handling problems that could  result in an
 involuntary "snap-roll" under certain conditions of air  speed, angle 
of attack, gross weight, and center of gravity. Several  crash reports 
tell of P-51Bs and P-51Cs crashing because horizontal  stabilizers were 
torn off during maneuvering. As a result of these  problems, a 
modification kit consisting of a dorsal fin was  manufactured. One 
report stated:
"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"
The
 dorsal fin kits became available in August 1944, and were fitted  to 
P-51Bs and P-51Cs, and to P-51Ds and P-51Ks. Also incorporated was a  
change to the rudder trim tabs, which would help prevent the pilot over-controlling the aircraft and creating heavy loads on the tail unit.
One
 of the few remaining complaints with the Merlin-powered aircraft  was a
 poor rearward view. The canopy structure, which was the same as  the 
Allison-engined Mustangs, was made up of flat, framed panels; the  pilot
 gained access, or exited the cockpit by lowering the port side  panel 
and raising the top panel to the right. The canopy could not be  opened 
in flight and tall pilots especially, were hampered by limited  
headroom.
  In order to at least partially improve the view from the Mustang, the 
 British had field-modified some Mustangs with clear, sliding canopies called Malcolm hoods (designed by Robert Malcolm). The new structure was a frameless plexiglas moulding which ballooned outwards at the top and sides, increasing the headroom and allowing increased visibility to the sides and rear.
  Because the new structure slid backwards on runners it could be slid  
open in flight. The aerial mast behind the canopy was replaced by a  
"whip" aerial which was mounted further aft and offset to the right.  
Most British Mk IIIs were equipped with Malcolm hoods. Several American 
 service groups "acquired" the necessary conversion kits and some  
American P-51B/P-51Cs appeared with the new canopy, although the  
majority continued to use the original framed canopies.
P-51Bs
 and P-51Cs started to arrive in England in August and October  1943. 
The P-51B/P-51C versions were sent to 15 fighter groups that were  part 
of the 8th and 9th Air Forces in England and the 12th and 15th in Italy (the southern part of Italy was under Allied control by late 1943). Other deployments included the China Burma India Theater (CBI).
Allied
 strategists quickly exploited the long-range fighter as a  bomber 
escort. It was largely due to the P-51 that daylight bombing  raids deep
 into German territory became possible without prohibitive  bomber 
losses in late 1943.
A number of the P-51B and P-51C aircraft were fitted for photo reconnaissance and designated F-6C.
 






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