
North American P-51
“Mustang”
The long-range escort fighter that finally reached Berlin and back — a mediocre low-altitude design transformed by one engine swap into the aircraft that broke German air power, and today the world’s most beloved warbird.
The engine swap that won the air war
The P-51 exists because North American Aviation said no. In early 1940 the British Purchasing Commission asked NAA to build Curtiss P-40s under licence; company president “Dutch” Kindelberger counter-offered to design a wholly better fighter instead. With British approval in April 1940, NAA rolled out the NA-73X prototype in a legendary 117 days, and it first flew on 26 October 1940.
The airframe was advanced from the start: a NACA-derived laminar-flow wing for low drag, and a belly-mounted ducted radiator exploiting the “Meredith effect.” But the early Allison-engined Mustang was superb only at low altitude, fading above ~15,000 ft. The transformation came when the Allison was replaced by the Rolls-Royce Merlin — built under licence in the USA by Packard as the V-1650 — creating the P-51B/C. Overnight the Mustang had war-winning high-altitude performance Ve extraordinary range.
The definitive P-51D added a cut-down rear fuselage and a bubble canopy for all-round vision plus six .50-cal guns. Combining the Packard-Merlin’s high-altitude muscle with huge internal fuel and drop tanks, the Mustang could fly to Berlin, fight, and return — hunting the Luftwaffe’s irreplaceable veteran pilots to destruction and handing the Allies daylight air supremacy before D-Day. Total production across all variants reached roughly 15,000+.
01The P-51 Mustang’s origins: how a refusal to build P-40s produced a war-winner in 117 days
When Britain came shopping for fighters in 1940, the obvious answer was more Curtiss P-40s. North American Aviation instead promised something better and delivered the NA-73X prototype in roughly 117 days from go-ahead — an astonishing pace for a clean-sheet design. The airframe married a low-drag laminar-flow wing to a thrust-recovering belly radiator, and it flew for the first time on 26 October 1940.
Yet the early Allison-powered P-51 was a disappointment above medium altitude, relegated by the RAF to low-level reconnaissance. The gamble only paid off when the airframe met the right engine — but that gamble had produced the aircraft that, re-engined, would help decide the air war over Europe.
What makes the P-51 Mustang special
The laminar-flow wing
The Mustang used a then-novel NACA low-drag airfoil whose point of maximum thickness sat far aft, keeping airflow smooth — “laminar” — over more of the wing. The result was markedly lower drag at cruise, a key reason the P-51 went so far on so little fuel, though in practice manufacturing tolerances limited true laminar flow.
Packard-Merlin V12 & the Meredith radiator
The licence-built Rolls-Royce Merlin (Packard V-1650) gave two-stage supercharged high-altitude power. Just as important, the deep belly radiator duct slowed, heated and re-accelerated cooling air through a nozzle, recovering thrust from what is normally pure cooling drag — a rare radiator that nearly paid for itself aerodynamically.
Exceptional range
Generous internal tankage — including a fuselage tank behind the pilot — plus jettisonable drop tanks pushed ferry range beyond ~2,000 miles (~3,300 km). No other single-seat WWII fighter combined this reach with front-line combat performance, the trait that made strategic bomber escort possible.
02The P-51 Mustang’s Merlin: the single most important upgrade of any WWII fighter
Early Mustangs flew on the Allison V-1710: strong down low but gasping above medium altitude, where the bombers needed protection most. Fitting the two-stage supercharged Packard-built Rolls-Royce Merlin transformed the aircraft — high-altitude speed climbed dramatically and, with the Mustang’s huge fuel load, so did its reach. The P-51B could now escort heavy bombers deep into Germany and back. More than the airframe, it was the engine that made the Mustang great.
03The P-51 Mustang’s radiator that made thrust: the Meredith effect explained
Cooling drag was a curse of liquid-cooled fighters. The Mustang’s ventral duct turned it into an asset: incoming air was slowed and compressed, heated by the radiator, then accelerated out of a nozzle at the rear — recovering a portion of the energy as thrust. Combined with the laminar-flow wing, this “Meredith effect” helps explain how the P-51 flew farther and faster than rivals on comparable power, though in practice it offset rather than fully cancelled cooling drag.
Full P-51D Mustang specifications
Airframe & Performance
- Mürettebat
- 1
- Uzunluk
- ~9.83 m (32 ft 3 in)
- Kanat açıklığı
- ~11.28 m (37 ft 0 in)
- Max speed
- ~703 km/h (437 mph) at ~25,000 ft
- Servis tavanı
- ~12,770 m (41,900 ft)
- Boş ağırlık
- ~3,465 kg
- Max weight
- ~5,490 kg
- Menzil
- ~2,000+ mi (~3,300 km) with drop tanks
Propulsion, Armament & Cost
- Motor
- Packard V-1650-7 (Rolls-Royce Merlin) V12
- Power
- ~1,490 hp (1,720 hp WEP)
- Guns
- 6 × 0.50-cal (12.7 mm) Browning M2
- Ordnance
- Up to 2 × 1,000 lb bombs or 10 × 5-in rockets
- First flight
- 26 October 1940 (NA-73X)
- Built
- ~15,000+ (commonly ~15,500–15,800)
- Unit cost
- ~US$50,000 (wartime)
- Cost per flight hour
- No reliable public figure
04The P-51 Mustang’s numbers: how many were built and what one cost
Production of the Mustang ran to roughly 15,000+ airframes across all variants; exact totals vary by source between about 15,000 and 15,875 depending on the count and whether the twin-fuselage F-82 is included. Wartime unit cost is usually cited around US$50,000 — early P-51s ran closer to US$58,000, falling to about US$50,000 by 1945 — but these are approximate figures that varied by year, variant and contract. Maximum-speed figures likewise depend on altitude, boost setting and configuration, so treat single numbers as representative rather than absolute.
From blank sheet to warbird legend
A clean-sheet design
The British Purchasing Commission approves NAA’s offer to design a wholly new fighter instead of building licensed P-40s.
First flight
The NA-73X prototype flies, roughly 117 days after go-ahead — a laminar-flow wing and thrust-recovering belly radiator from the start.
RAF combat debut
The Allison-engined Mustang Mk I enters RAF service for low-level reconnaissance and ground attack.
The Merlin transformation
The Packard-Merlin P-51B/C enters service; escort range and high-altitude performance are transformed.
Escort to Berlin
Mustangs escort bombers all the way to Berlin, hunting the Luftwaffe fighter arm in a war of attrition it cannot win.
The definitive P-51D
The bubble-canopy, six-gun P-51D becomes the mass-production standard.
Over Japan
Long-range Mustangs escort B-29s from Iwo Jima to Japan; the lightweight P-51H arrives late in the war.
Korean War
Redesignated F-51D, the Mustang flies close air support — rugged but tragically vulnerable to ground fire.
The last military Mustangs
Late users such as the Dominican Republic retire the type (~1984); the warbird era continues to this day.
From the flight line: twelve Mustang stories
117 days to a legend
NAA built a world-beating fighter from a blank sheet in under four months.
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The Merlin miracle
One engine swap turned a dud into a war-winner.
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Red tails over Europe
The Tuskegee Airmen flew red-tailed Mustangs into history.
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The escort that reached Berlin
Mustangs went where no Allied fighter had gone before.
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George Preddy’s guns
The top Mustang ace fell to his own side.
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Comeback as a bomb truck
The escort fighter returned as a mud-mover.
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Reno rockets
Stripped, clipped and boosted, Mustangs became air-racing icons.
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Fly a two-seat TF-51 today
A handful of Mustangs will let a civilian take the stick.
Read the full story
The Dominican Mustangs
A WWII fighter soldiering on into the 1980s.
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The radiator that made thrust
The scoop under the belly was not just for cooling.
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Two Mustangs, one fighter
NAA bolted two fuselages together.
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The Cadillac of the sky
Pilots called it the finest prop fighter they ever flew.
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The Mustang in pictures






The Mustang in motion
A documentary film on the P-51 Mustang will be added here soon.
Where the Mustang flew
The fighter that broke German air power
The Mustang’s headline achievement was strategic: by escorting bombers deep into Germany and back, it enabled the daylight bombing campaign and destroyed the Luftwaffe’s veteran pilots in the air. As always with WWII tallies, treat kill figures as claims rather than settled scores.
Compare the combat record of every military aircraft. Figures as of July 2026.
Everything people ask about the P-51 Mustang
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How did it compare to the Bf 109 and Fw 190?
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Allison vs Merlin — what’s the difference?
You can’t fly the P-51.
These, you can.
Some legends only live in museums — others are fuelled and waiting. MiGFlug has put civilians in real military jet cockpits since 2004.
Continue the tour
Every fact, checked
- Air & Space Forces Magazine — “Mustang!”Development, the Merlin transformation and the escort campaign over Germany.
- MustangsMustangs.com — SpecificationsDetailed variant-by-variant performance and dimensional data.
- MustangsMustangs.com — Foreign ServiceThe full roster of national operators used for the map.
- Encyclopaedia Britannica — P-51Concise overview of design, role and significance.
- Warfare History Network — George PreddyThe top-scoring Mustang ace and his death by friendly fire.
- KITPLANES — “The Meredith Effect”How the belly radiator recovered thrust — fact versus myth.
- The National Interest — Korean War comebackThe F-51D in the close-air-support role, 1950–53.
- Joe Baugher — P-51D/K in Foreign ServiceSerial-level detail on export and post-war operators.