43-2195 wrote:
And whilst we are on this topic, I have a personal photo taken by a Fifth Air Force member that shows a B-25 off the side of the runway(either the nose gear has collapsed or has gone into a ditch) with it's tail high in the air. I believe that it's taken at Charters Towers(based on vegetation) but there is no way to confirm this. What makes it INCREDIBLY interesting is that on close scrutiny, the side gun blister packs can be made out, AFT OF THE WING TRAILING EDGE. Anyone seen this before? I believe it may be one of Pappy's experiments, I have never seen or heard it mentioned before.
Oooooh! Please post it!

The Inspector wrote:
There was a factory kit for what were called 'Fairfax windows' (originally developed for the desert campaign I believe) where a flat sided early B-25 could have a set of field installed 'blister windows' similar to, but not the same as the later factory blistered windows (the biggest difference was in the lower sill 'dishpan' fairing size/shape) and required BIG holes being hacked into the aft fuselage sides, subtle but distinctive when you know what you're looking for. Just about every B-25 modeller has asked for years for some aftermarket resin guy to do the fairfax mod.........sounds of crickets snoring...........
This was posted while I was writing my post, so I looked it up. Found an earlier WIX thread:
B-25 Bombardier Floor Window. I'm still confused as to exactly what the "Fairfax windows" are though. As I understand it, it is some sort of modification of the waist gun windows. Part of what's confusing me is what I assume to be the implication that the mystery blister packs in the first quote are misidentified versions of the Fairfax windows. This seems to be an unlikely misidentification to make. Or am I reading something wrong?
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