Hobby Master HA7755 USAAF North American P-51D Mustang Fighter - 463702, "Grim Reaper", 355th Fighter Squadron "Fightin' Falcons", AAF Station Herzogenaurach, Germany, 1945 (1:48 Scale)
"With engine trouble, I was alone, trying to catch up with our Group near Strasbourg. I saw seven 109s pass beneath me, a group of four followed by three, one of which was smoking. I called for help then dove on the one that was smoking, firing from 600 yards to 100 yards when the Hun went into the deck and exploded. I then turned to the one on the left which also exploded as he hit the deck. In the meantime, two got on my tail and I went into a tight orbit. At that time, six P-47s appeared and drove them off. I then turned on the third 109 which tried to do a short landing on an airdrome. He hit the ground with his wing flying off as I ran to avoid the flak. My R/T was out so I headed for home. I soon encountered a Ju-88 and as I fired on it three chutes appeared and the plane exploded."
- Captain Ted Lines, September 10th, 1944
No other aircraft of WWII could fly as high, go as far, or fight as hard as the famed Mustang. Piloted by a record 281 Aces, this agile and ferocious dogfighter tallied more kills than any other Allied airplane. As the bombers of the Eighth Air Force fought their way deep into Hitler's Germany, it was the Mustang that cleared the skies of Luftwaffe fighters. The powerful Rolls-Royce Merlin engine gave the Mustang a speed of 445 mph. Re-styled with an aerodynamic bubble canopy for greater visibility, and outfitted with 6 fast-firing .50 caliber machine guns, the P-51 became the best fighter of the war.
The P-51K Mustang was essentially a P-51D with a different propeller. With war production at max capacity in Inglewood, NAA added P-51 production at their Dallas Texas plant starting with the P-51B. The new designation of the B models built in Dallas was P-51C.
When the P-51D began production, once again the Dallas plant was needed. Unlike the B models, when the D models were built in Dallas, their designation of "D" was kept. They were identified as built from the Dallas plant with the "NT" suffix. So a -5 block of a D model Mustang built in Dallas would be a P-51D-5NT. These were identical to a P-51D-5NA, built in Inglewood, Ca.
nicknamed
Pictured here is a 1:48 scale replica of a USAAF North American P-51D Mustang fighter that was "Grim Reaper" and attached to the 355th Fighter Squadron "Fightin' Falcons", then deployed to AAF Station Herzogenaurach, Germany, during 1945.
Pre-order! Ship Date: March 2025.
Dimensions:
Wingspan: 8-1/2-inches
Length: 7-1/2-inches
Release Date: ?
Historical Account: "Fightin' Falcons" - In late 1943, the strategic bombardment campaign over Occupied Europe and Nazi Germany being conducted by VIII Bomber Command was taking heavy losses in aircraft and flight crews as the VIII Fighter Command's Lockheed P-38 Lightnings and Republic P-47 Thunderbolts lacked the range to escort the heavy B-17 Flying Fortress and B-24 Liberator bombers deep into Germany to attack industrial and military targets. The P-51 had the range to perform the escort duties and the unit's operational control was transferred to Headquarters, Eighth Air Force to perform escort missions. From its base at RAF Boxted, the unit flew long-range strategic escort missions with VIII Bomber Command groups, escorting the heavy bombers to targets such as Frankfurt, Leipzig, Augsburg, and Schweinfurt, engaging Luftwaffe day interceptors frequently, with the P-51s outperforming the German Bf 109 and Fw 190 interceptors, causing heavy losses to the Luftwaffe. Remained under operational control of Eighth Air Force until April 1944, when sufficient numbers of P-51D Mustangs and arrived from the United States and were assigned to VIII Fighter Command units for escort duty.
Was relieved from escort duty and reassigned to RAF Lashenden on the southern coast of England. Mission was redefined to provide tactical air support for the forthcoming invasion of France, to support the Third, and later Ninth United States Armies. Flew fighter sweeps over Normandy and along the English Channel coast of France and the Low Countries, April-June 1944, then engaged in heavy tactical bombing of enemy military targets as well as roads, railroads and bridges in the Normandy area to support ground forces in the immediate aftermath of D-Day.
Moved to Advanced Landing Grounds in France beginning at the end of June 1944, moving eastwards to combat airfields and liberated French airports supporting Allied Ground forces as the advanced across Northern France. Later, in 1944, the squadron became involved in dive-bombing and strafing missions, striking railroad yards, bridges, troop concentrations, and airfields. As winter set in the squadron temporarily re-equipped with the P-47 Thunderbolt. Participated in attacks on German forces in Belgium in the aftermath of the Battle of the Bulge, then moved eastward as part of the Western Allied invasion of Germany. The squadron flew its last mission of the war on May 7th, 1945, from the captured Luftwaffe airfield at Ansbach (R-45).
Remained in Occupied Germany as part of the United States Air Forces in Europe XII Tactical Air Command occupying force after the German Capitulation, being stationed at AAF Station Herzogenaurach. The squadron was inactivated on March 31st, 1946.