No you dont. The manufacturer only makes the plane, the user is a military organisation and they produce their own "manual" based on their experience. The US enquired how the British used the "Mustang" and reported back to the USA. This is a curious thing to do in your philosophy because the Americans were making it, but the British were flying it on tactical recon. missions. In practice, the way the British used the Mustang (P-51A) with 180 gals internal fuel resulted in a range of 90 miles inland from the enemy coast. I dont think "enemy coast" appears as a variable in the NAA manual for the Mustang I or II.All you need to do is look at the Flight Operation Instruction Chart for either airplane.
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