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P-82 Twin Mustang Gun Test at Night
P-82 Twin Mustang Nighttime Gun Test
P-82 Twin Mustang Nighttime Gun Test
XP-82 Twin Mustang Prototype with Rockets, Bombs, and .50 Caliber Gun Pod
P-51B Mustang Gun Sight
P-51B Mustang Gun Wing
P-51B Mustang Gun Wing
P-82 Twin Mustang Night Fighter
P-82 Twin Mustang on Runway
P-82 Twin Mustang with Man On Nose
P-82 Twin Mustang onTarmac
P-82 Twin Mustang Nightfighter
P-82 Twin Mustangs Lined Up for Takeoff
P-82 Twin Mustang on Tarmac
Men Cleaning P-51 Mustang Machine Guns
P-82B Twin Mustang with Ram Jet Installed
P-82 Twin Mustang Being Towed
P-82 Twin Mustang Betty Joe with Spectators
P-82 Twin Mustang Betty Joe with Women Sitting on Drop Tanks
P-82C Twin Mustang in Flight
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P-82 Twin Mustang Gun Pod
The North American P-82 Twin Mustang was the climactic development of a long series of the famous World War II P-51 Mustang series. North American produced 250 of the double-fuselaged airplanes for the Air Force, embracing three versions of the Twin Mustang then in service, the P-82E, P-82F, and P-82G. The versatility of the P-82 made it potentially adaptable to a wide variety of roles in modern aerial warfare. It could have been used as a fighter, a long-range escort, long-range reconnaissance, night fighter, attack bomber, rocket fighter or an interceptor. With a speed of more than 475 miles an hour, the Twin Mustang had a combat range of over 1,600 miles with full armament. Range could be extended by use of external drop tanks on the wings. A radical departure from the conventional single-fuselage airplane, the Twin Mustang was formed by two fuselages joined by the wing and the horizontal stabilizer. With a pilot in each fuselage, it reduced the problem of pilot fatigue on ultra-long-range missions. The P-82F and G models carried a radar operator in the right cockpit instead of a co-pilot.
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Unique identifier
BI211076
Boeing ID
naa2978
Type
Image
Size
3950px × 5100px 19MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1940s
airplanes
ammunition/weapons systems
close-ups
day
detail views
exteriors
fighters
ground shots
historic production status
left front views
military
monoplanes
nobody
photos
power
propeller planes
tarmac
text
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