Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum Park Ridge, IL (Orchard AFB; Orchard Place) Collection

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Or maybe not...



From the NASM website:

The NASM aircraft (Werknummer 120230) was one of the thirty-one JG 1 aircraft manufactured by Heinkel at Rostock-Marienehe and captured by the British at Leck on May 8, 1945. It was painted with the number "white 23" and its red-white-black nose bands were in reverse order from the usual paint scheme, which may indicate that the wing commander and high-scoring ace, Col. Herbert Ihlefeld, flew this particular aircraft. After transfer to Britain, the U. S. Army Air Forces accepted the airplane and shipped it to Wright Field, Ohio, for evaluation. It received the foreign equipment number FE-504 (later T2-504), and was later moved to Freeman Field, Indiana. For unknown reasons, mechanics replaced the tail unit at Wright Field with the tail unit of aircraft 120222. Although another He 162, T2-489, was tested at Muroc Field, California (later Edwards Air Force Base), FE/T2-504 was apparently never flown. Its flying days ended permanently when someone at Freeman Field neatly sawed through the outer wing panels sometime before September 1946. The wings were reattached with door hinges and the jet was shipped to air shows and military displays around the country. The U. S. Air Force transferred the aircraft to the Smithsonian Institution in 1949 but it remained in stored at Park Ridge, Illinois, until transfer to the Garber Facility in January 1955.

The plot thickens!
 

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Did Horton hear the Who?
 

Cap, d'you have a clearer, less pixellated copy of this image? The twin-engined aircraft directly ahead of the XB-42 Mixmaster to the left, identified by its undercarriage might be your mystery twin. According to one of the posters of the thread about the facility it is a P1Y Ginga.
 
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Not a ramjet on the XB-42A. It is a Westinghouse X19B-2 axial turbojet engine.
 

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