visaliaaviation wrote:
51fixer,
Not to belittle your understading of B/C vs D configurations, a recent photo of Princess Elizabeth would seem to indicate that the fuselage is still pretty much a D, as it appears to still have a vertical panel line (a D feature) in the vicinity of the A frame roll over pylon. On B/C, I believe this panel line was canted at the same angle (forward slope ) of the pylon.
You also wrote:
"Most agree that the D needs the fillet as the cut down fuselage of the D messes with its stability"
Don't you find it interesting that the T.O. you mentioned stated that BOTH B/C and D's were warned against engaging in certain flight regimens to keep the tails from failing, until BOTH had the DFF and the rudder trim tab mod???!!!An intrim/late P-51B/C pilot's Manual I have says the DFF was added to "strengthen the tail and add stability in the roll"
After much consideration of the factory drawings for the earliest P-51D DFF, I think the manual and the T.O. are quite correct. The Dorsal Fin Fillet is a rather substantial piece of re-enforcement, primarily for strength (gusseting the forward fin into the considerable shear value of the aft tail cone) and not nessesarily for the loss of any "side area".
Charlie,
I said that Mustangs had horizontals that failed. I really didn't specify a model.
You have mentioned that Princess still retains the D skin panel line. As the design of the Mustang has been improved with time there are areas that are redesigned and made better in the later models. (Such as the MLG. It had dozens of moving parts in various linkages that were eliminated in the D.) That skin line is where the frame structure has the rear wing to fus mount fittings located. There is a pair of frame members which run parallel from top longeron to lower longeron and have a large machined fitting at the bottom in which the 5/8" bolt that secures the rear wing spar to the fus fits. The D they made this vertical rather than canted at a slight angle. It is stronger to keep them vertical, the parts are available rather than having to make them and it is easier to torque the bolts since the ratchet and extension don't have fight the angle. If this discounts this aircraft as a C then yell at John Muszala for his shop did the work. There are dozens of other details that were rebuilt as C rather than D with the restoration so I don't think it is "pretty much still a D" as you suggest.
You are thought of as a expert on the Mustang but if you are giving info that seems to be contrary to fact that I have experienced I will give my view of things.
Now I have a different opinon on the addition of the fillet as its being thin sheet metal it is only a fairing and does little to act as a reinforcement to any structure. The forward vertical stab attach is a massive chunk of metal that is held by 4 5/16" dia bolts in tight fitting holes through the rear spar of the horizontal. The horizontal was attached by 7/16" and 3/8" bolts. In contrast the fillet's multiple #10(3/16") screws with tinnerman(thin dimpled flat washer) washers in 5/8" holes will not withstand any of the loads the vertical must endure. It also has 5 3/16" (2 fwd and 3 rear and about 18" seperating them) bolts which attach the fillets frame to the vertical and the rear upper frame of the tailcone in addition to the screws. This still can't take the load that the tailcone or vertical must take. The tailcone nutplates are only located in skin. Not in the frame members so the attachment load is only applied to the skin. That doesn't sound like a re-enforcement of substance.
Out of the 3 things done in regards to these 2 TO's the most important are rudder deboost and horizontal stab re-enforcement. The fairing helped but wasn't installed on all B/C aircraft. It appears that the majority of the D models had the fillet installed.
This selective following of TO requirememts is similar to a later TO which installed metal elevators and specified a change in the angle of incidence of the horizontal to 1/2 degree from 1 degree. This was because the fabric would swell at high speeds and act as a trim tab. It must be frustrating to try to aim guns if you had to fight a porpoising airplane or be constantly triming. The majority of mustangs had the metal elevators installed but most Mustangs I have worked on still had the 1 degree horizontals rather than the 1/2 degree horizontals called out in this TO. Out of the 2 items in the TO the most effective is just changing the elevators to metal. I take care of 3 Mustangs currently, Bald Eagle had the 1 degree but I found the fwd spar cracked in 98 and changed it to a 1/2 degree horizontal we got from Square One. Frenesi also had a 1 degree but I am currently installing a brand new 1/2 degree one. Princess Elizabeth has a 1 degree with fabric elevators. (This is the 1st out of 13 Mustangs that I have worked on to have fabric elevators.) When changing the horizontal from 1 degree to 1/2 degree you end up changing the fwd vertical attach as well. It is a PITA. I can understand why this part of the TO wasn't done much.
I am presently building up the tail on Jim Beasley's Frenesi and will soon be drilling holes to locate the nutplates that attach the fillet. We had Gerry Beck and Tristate rebuild the fus and tailcone. Only about 15% are original parts now. The fus had been rebuilt in the past from 2 seperate airframes and spliced together just forward of the radiator. The tailcone looked like a chessboard on the skin with sections spliced together as well. It had served in the Dominican Republic as well as crashing in the Cleveland Air Races. Not the greatest pedigree.
Rich