AAF wrote:
In my modest opinion, “Mustang Survivros” contains very good data, albeit a number of obvious mistakes, as the following (or so I believe): most have agreed that the FAS Mustang shot down on July 17th was FAS 404, however, the book (page 118) credits ex-44-73458 (122-39917) to be FAS 404, and said to be exhibited at Champlin Fighter Museum, in Mesa, Arizona (?).
Yes, 44-73458 was also given the ID FAS 404, but later in 1969 and well after the Cavalier FAS 404 was shot down. Not the same airplane. It is now headed for the UK where, apparently, it will be restored. There was just a thread about this aircraft here on WIX recently.
On another note, there is no publication that has ever given a complete, correct picture of the Cavalier operation and the aircraft they sold/built/modified. You should take with a grain of salt any data on these aircraft, as I have yet to find one that is error-free. It seems that most have not bothered to actually research for themselves or cross-check facts with different sources. They appear to have simply re-printed information that was made previously available and added to it, which unfortunately means that mistakes have been printed and re-printed, to the point that the mistakes have become "fact" in the annals of Mustang history. Coggan's book, while beautiful and interesting, just happens to be one of them that continues to get some of the facts wrong when it comes to the Cavalier airplanes.
The Cavalier Mustangs are such a small sliver of the history of the P-51, and there can't be that many people who really
care about the subject, so it's no wonder that nobody has really delved into the topic that deeply.
How can I be so self-righteous that I can declare so many publications in error? I am writing a book on the topic of the Cavalier Mustangs, and have done extensive research for it over the last 6 years. People who have been reading WIX for a while have seen snapshots of me going through the process of educating myself on the topic.
In researching for my book -- which didn't actually start out as a book but rather just a quest for more information for my own gratification -- I actually went to the SOURCES THEMSELVES to get the information. It's been a long, but enlightening, process that has showed these numerous mistakes. For a taste of some of that research, check out the article "Peace Ponies" in Warbird Digest #9, which talks about the heretofore untold story of the Cavalier aircraft made for and sent to Indonesia in the early 1970s. Although books like Coggan's have briefly talked about these aircraft (for example, in Coggan's book, if you read the caption under the photo of 44-72777, it incorrectly says that the airplane was re-made into 72-1537 by Cavalier and sent to Indonesia), none of them bothered to actually contact people who were involved in the Peace Pony operation and get firsthand information. Coggan has
part of the picture, but not all of it, and thus makes some incorrect assumptions with the data. Not an accusation or implication that he had sloppy research or anything, but he simply didn't have all the information.
I was fortunate to be introduced to Irwin Whittemore, who actually formed the company that built the Cavaliers for Indonesia (this was after Cavalier Aircraft Corporation had officially gone out of business) and then went to Indonesia to teach the AURI pilots. His photographs, logbook, and other datapoints were very valuable in my research.
So, apologies for that massive detour, but it was intended to point out that there are lots and lots of crossed wires and poor pieces of data pertaining to the Cavalier Mustangs which need to be un-tangled. I am cetain that my book will ruffle the feathers of some "Mustang historians" with these 'corrections' to the record!
I
do not claim to know it all or to be the single-source expert on the topic. I do, however, take pride in being a thorough, fair researcher and an accurate reporter of my findings.
AAF wrote:
Having said that, I would like to point out the following statement found on page 168 of Mr. Coggan’s book: “… some of the aircraft reworked by Cavalier completely lost their original manufacture’s identity and USAF serial numbers and were allocated new FY 67 and 68 USAF serial numbers”.
Yes, other Cavaliers were given '67 USAF numbers (the Peace Condor aircraft), '68 USAF numbers (the two Army aircraft), and even a '69 USAF number (a Peace Hawk aircraft). The FAS Cavaliers, as I posted earlier, had no such USAF serial numbers.
AAF wrote:
About FAS 406: do you have evidence as to when this aircraft was actually received by the FAS?
I have one source that says 1 December 1968 (Hagedorn) and another two sources that say 15 July 1969 or 17 July 1969. I don't currently have any other independant evidence that supports any of those dates.
AAF wrote:
Can you confirm if the USAF serial number and NAA c/n are as follows? (allegedly ex-44-73656, 122-40196, Cavalier 750)
Yes, it was definitely a Cavalier 750, "rebuilt" in 1962 by Trans Florida for Dunbar-Stanley Studios of Charlotte, NC. The SN and NAA number are correct. It was NOT specially-built as a Cavalier for the FAS. It just happened to be one of the aircraft that Archie's people purchased in the US for conscription into service with the FAS.
AAF wrote:
I find the details about the “hired” pilots very interesting, but at the same token, strange, as they did not seem to be aware (or informed) of some very important developments that were affecting the overall Salvadoran air operations.
There was secrecy for protection of both parties. The FAS did not want it known that they hired mercenaries, and it was best for the mercenaries that they not see too much of what was going on. After hostilities were over, one of the three Americans, having made close friends with some of the other FAS personnel, spent considerable time in El Salvador recreationally, and even helped the FAS a little by smuggling parts and equipment to El Salvador while there was still an OAS and US State Department embargo.
AAF wrote:
I don’t dispute their ability as pilots, but my question remains: did the FAS 401, 403 and 405 pilots have combat experience?
One was a well known USAF jet ace from the Korean war, another was a former USAF fighter pilot, and the third had no military experience but a lot of high performance flying in the P-51 (and other warbirds) including unlimited air racing. All of them had lots of P-51 time and were airshow pilots.
AAF wrote:
Combat experienced or not, I personally believe that none of the “hired” pilots took part in any air operation after the two FG-1Ds had been shot down (shortly after noontime) or thereafter until the end of hostilities on July 18th (pm). The Honduran pilots did not report sighting any enemy aircraft in any of the three combat theaters, neither did any of the ground command posts
Just because they were not seen over Honduras doesn't mean they did not take part in any combat air operation. Quite the contrary -- they showed up the 16th, and flew combat sorties for four days (yes, after the cease fire because apparently nobody believed that either side was going to honor it!). According to the two I interviewed, they primarily flew up and down the border area -- they were paid best for shooting down FAH aircraft, and they were ONLY paid if it was shot down in Salvadorian territory, so they were trying to make sure that's where any wreckage landed. They apparently even used the FAS B-26 as a "decoy" to try and lure FAH Corsairs across the border so they could shoot them down there. They were mercenaries -- although they were there to help out a friend, Archie, they were also there to make money. More money was to be made flying multiple sorties and attempting to shoot down FAH aircraft than flying into Honduras and dropping bombs.
AAF wrote:
Neither Captain Zepeda or Captain Soto remember if the Mustangs had wingtip tanks or not. So, with three of the "hired" pilots having a Cavalier each at their entire disposal, is it fair to say that the collision at Ilopango did not affect either aircraft, and that Captain Lobo may have been flying'402 (#2) on that fateful mission?
I'm pretty certain it was FAS 404 that Soto shot down. I still have doubts about who was involved in the ground collision. Hagedorn says it was two Cavaliers. I say it might have been two, might have been one, or might have been none. It still all depends on how serious the crash was.
The tiptanks were removed from all the Cavaliers the evening of the 16th, so that's not a good ID feature.
We know that FAS 402#2 survived the war (it is a flyable warbird today, called 'Archie'), and it would have been VERY obvious if FAS 404 had survived the war due to the extent of the Cavalier mods. I don't have the information in front of me, as I'm currently deployed in Afghanistan, but Marco Lavignino has further evidence from the wreckage that it was FAS 404. I seem to remember that it was the dataplate from the landing gear door, but I might be wrong.