Aircraft Identification V

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Hi Carson, there are more photos on the Web of that Irish Corps Spitfire.

Thanks Emilio for the excellent pics.
I didn't realize that irish corps spitfires had roundels exactly like the south korean markings (Having just a black/white photo I couldn't tell the colour difference)!
On the other hand it seemed strange that british planes could be in Korea.
carson1934:D :D
 
a new one...an interesting one, I hope...
 

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I have problems in identifying the attached pic.
For the clever guys of this forum it should be a cinch!
Thanks for helping me
carson1934:?: :?: :?:
 

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What's the name of this large US fighter with the radar scanner protruding from its belly? Thanks in advance to anyone who cares to answer
carson1934
 

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a new one...an interesting one, I hope...

hmmm.... any idea, guys? ok...the prototype was flown for the first time in 1943, at Yangling. After circling the airfield, the aircraft landed too fast, ground-looped and was written off...
 
hmmm.... any idea, guys? ok...the prototype was flown for the first time in 1943, at Yangling. After circling the airfield, the aircraft landed too fast, ground-looped and was written off...

From the information you are giving us it looks like CHU (AFAMF) X-PO and the predicament you are talking about happened to this very aircraft.
However the pic I have looks very different from the one you have submitted.
Is it right or wrong?
carson1934:?: :?: :?:
 
New one
They replaced a fuel tank with an engineers position. What aircraft and why...


No further interest in this one?

Okay. It was the modified Bell XP-83 used for ramjet research.
 

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