North American P-51 Mustang: Fuselage

North American P-51 Mustang: Fuselage

The drawing archive I have contains quite a large selection of legible fuselage frame drawings which I am collating according to the Station reference on the fuselage. I have a spreadsheet that lists all the Mustang drawings including the original drawing number, the scan image number and location within the archive.

Each fuselage frame at each of the designated stations may comprise 3 or more elements, which unfortunately are scattered throughout the many rolls of scans thus requiring some exhaustive work with the spreadsheet data-sets to sort the numbers and folder locations in order to identify and collate the required frames for each assembly per aircraft type.

One such frame was at station 216 which I decided to model; partly due to the fact I was getting fed up looking at and sorting spreadsheet data.

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There are several methods to modelling this and whilst I was subject to the vagaries and still limitations of the Inventor product (Solidworks has more options for working with splines) I developed a workflow that obviates some of these limitations and also how the end product is finished.

One way of doing this is to simply create a surface for the main plane and then project a flange line along the edge to create a”folded” surface and then apply thickness but this method gave some unusual iterations in the smoothness of the fillets at the end of the profile. I found that the best way is to create surfaces for all six faces; the splines inside and outside, the top and bottom planes and the ends, then sculpt to create a solid.

I would then go out about creating the notches and cutouts in the solid and then shell the solid to the required thickness. This works very well and ensures the integrity of the original spline ordinate lines (which would have to be split to do this any other way). This method also maintains better continuity of the end fillets and curvature (image 2).

The frame drawings reference the mold line ordinates, which I have for the P-51 B/C Mustang variants.The P-51D is similar with the exception of the ridgeback on the main rear fuselage that has been reduced above the +10″ W.L.

Techy stuff: I mentioned a limitation in the Inventor software which relates to creating a line perpendicular to a spline. In Solidworks you just sketch the line and constrain it perpendicular to the spline, but you cant just do it this way in Inventor (as far as I know). What I did was use sketch construction lines to define the point of intersection with the spline that I wanted the perpendicular line to start from. As I already had a surface projected from the mold frame spline (for above construction) all I had to do was create a new plane perpendicular to this surface at the selected point. It was then quite simple to create a further sketch to define the line I wanted perpendicular to the spline at the correct location.

North American P-51 Mustang: NAA Profiles

NAA P-51 B/C/D Mustang:

The majority of parts created for aircraft like the P-51 are derived from a library of standard section profiles, not unlike the steel and ship building industries. Fortunately for this project we have an extensive collection of these original NAA standard drawings, numbering 208 in total.

To facilitate the long term goal of recreating the P-51 part drawings as 3D models and associated 2D drawings I figured it may be prudent to first recreate the standard profiles as 2D CAD profiles for this purpose.

So far I have drawn the first 24 profiles exactly as shown on the original drawings but with dimensions in dual format inch & mm…many more to go!

NAA-1E1          NAA-1E1a

North American P-51 Mustang Parts

NAA P-51 B/C/D Mustang:

Ordinates interpretation, translation and development are an important part of my research work and rather essential to the development of the many part and frame components.

It would be great to be able to develop a full parts library for any of these aircraft projects in 3D CAD and recreate the original drawings. However the number of parts in any one aircraft is prohibitive to achieving this goal. I do though occasionally indulge in developing some of the part drawings; in 3D and 2D; if nothing more than a challenge to recreate something that was first designed 75 years ago!

These are some of the parts modelled for the P-51 Mustang:

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73-47058 Flange: Oil Tank Filler Neck               73-52144 Fitting: Aileron Control Stick

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99-33463 Clip at Wing Station 56.625           99-318116 Link: Cockpit Encl Exit Hatch

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99-318134 Bracket: Cockpit Enclosure               106-48343 Bracket: Fuel Valve Support

102-53391 Outlet Assy Haet Vent System Cockpit 2015-05-31_17-25-10

102-53391 Outlet Assembly: Heat & Vent Cockpit

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102-33338 & 102-58181 Landing Gear Fairing Door Strut.