jdvoss wrote:
WIX'er "M-62" states that his research shows that the aircraft crashed in March of 1945 after the pilot bailed out. The aircraft must not have been too severely damaged as the pictured aircraft has the red bar in the insignia which dates the photo as no earlier than January 1947.
JDV
http://www.fuselagecodes.comThe record I copied from the Baugher USAAF serial site refers to two aircraft designated XP-80A.
Only the first, 44-83021, crashed.
The subject of the photograph is the second XP-80A, 44-83022, which was "Later fitted with Westinghouse J34 turbojet in support of XP-90 program".
I suspect what the photograph shows are the results of those modifications.
Following quote from Putnam/Francillion, "Lockheed Aircraft since 1913"...
"The second XP-80A (44-83022) was fitted from the onset with a second seat, aft of the pilot, for an engineering-observer. Later the aircraft was used as a testbed for the Westinghouse J-34 axial-flow turbojet in support of the XP-90 programme. The intended afterburner for this engine was not initially installed but instrumentation and afterburner fuel lines were housed in a dorsal spine extending from the rear of the canopy to the front of the fin."
Hopefully I have attached a copy of the Individual Aircraft Record Card for 44-83022..
I will leave to others to interpret the record as it is outside of my area of experience.
Just happens to be on the same microfilm reel as a batch of Fairchild UC-61K that I am researching.
Tony Broadhurst