I'm not sure how many people know of this aircraft, but I am fortunate enough to live just a few miles from where the last remaining flyable example is hangared. Ever since I was a child, I would try and sneak peaks through the hangar windows to see it, and on a couple of occasions I have gotten the chance to see it outdoors during past airshows. Yesterday, with the return of the P-51C "Tuskegee Airmen" to the airport, I noticed that the hangar door was open, and thought I would walk down and see if it was still there.
I was glad to meet the owners of the aircraft, and they couldn't have been more welcoming, kind, and knowledgeable on the aircraft's history. I was invited to have a look around the aircraft, and actually climb aboard. Walking through the passenger cabin, at 6-foot 2-in, I was literally bent in half - it was amazing to think that this was the modern-era of airline travel at one time - and it is a good thing that I am lean, with how close the seats come to one another. All of the passenger windows roll up and down, like automobile windows, with classic, period crank handles, and the seats are all wicker. The cockpit is a thing of simplicity, and has some similarities to that of the Tri-Motor's cockpit. It just went through a full annual - the thing could fly if the owners decided to do so - and it does undergo engine runs. The insurance cost for keeping it static is astronomical, and the cost of insurance for flying it would be doubled.
It will be undergoing an engine run some time within the next two weeks, and I hope to be able to catch it. I was told that when they do fire it up, it usually starts immediately on the first attempt. Unfortunately there wasn't much light within the hangar, and I was more eager to look at it not through a camera lens, but here are a few photos:
Some better photos are available here:
http://www.airliners.net/photo/Northwes ... 1321816/L/
http://www.airliners.net/photo/Northwes ... 0617818/L/
http://www.airliners.net/photo/North...H47/0617817/L/