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Home Base:
Rexburg, ID
Operation: Western and Central
USA
Model: P-63C-5
Wing Span: 38' 4"
Length: 32' 8"
Height: 12' 7"
Max Speed: 410 mph
Gross Weight: 10,700 lbs
Power Plant: Allison V-1710-117
Horsepower: 1,800
Fuel Capacity:
Armament: 1× 37 mm M4 cannon firing
through the propeller hub 4× 0.50 in (12.7mm) M2
Browning machine guns (two in the nose, two in
the wings), up to three 522-pound bombs.
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John Bagley's Bell P-63C-5 Kingcobra

John Bagley
is the owner and operator of this rare Bell
P-63C-5 Kingcobra (S/N 43-11223), which is on display at the
Legacy Flight Museum in
Rexburg, ID. and is
available for airshows, flybys and
film. This is a
magnificently restored aircraft; one of only three (3)
P-63s in the world today that are still airworthy.
An American fighter developed in WWII, it was never
accepted for combat by the Army Air Forces. Most all
were sent to Russia under the Lend-Lease program where
the Russians very successfully used them in combat, both
against the Luftwaffe and against German tanks with the
37mm cannon in the nose.
Air Transport Command ferry pilots, including U.S.
women pilots of the WASP program, picked up the planes
at the Bell factory at Niagara Falls, New York, and flew
them to Great Falls, Montana and then onward via the
Alaska-Siberia Route (ALSIB), through Canada, over
Alaska where Russian ferry pilots, many of them women,
would take delivery of the aircraft at Nome and fly them
to the Soviet Union over the Bering Strait. A total of
2,397 such aircraft were delivered, out of the overall
3,303 production aircraft (72.6%).
By a 1943 agreement, P-63s were disallowed for Soviet
use against Germany and were supposed to be concentrated
in the Soviet Far East for an eventual attack on Japan.
However, there are many unconfirmed reports from both
the Soviet and German side that P-63s did indeed see
service against the Luftwaffe. Most notably, one of
Pokryshkin's pilots reports in his memoirs published in
the 1990s that the entire 4th GvIAP was secretly
converted to P-63s in 1944, while officially still
flying P-39s. One account states they were in action at
Koenigsberg, in Poland and in the final assault on
Berlin. There are German reports of P-63s shot down by
both fighters and flak. Nevertheless, all Soviet records
show nothing but P-39s used against Germany.
In general, official Soviet histories played down the
role of Lend-Lease supplied aircraft in favor of local
designs, but it is known that the P-63 was a successful
ground attack aircraft in Soviet service. The Soviets
developed successful group aerial fighting tactics for
the Bell fighters and
P-39s scored a surprising number of aerial victories
over German aircraft, mostly Stukas and bombers but
including many advanced fighters as well. Low ceilings,
short missions, good radios, a sealed and warm cockpit
and ruggedness contributed to their effectiveness. To
pilots who had once flown the tricky Polikarpov I-16,
the aerodynamic quirks of the mid-engined aircraft were
unimportant. In the Far East, P-63 and P-39 aircraft
were used in August Storm, the Soviet invasion of
Manchukoku and northern Korea, where a Soviet P-63A
downed a Japanese fighter aircraft, an Army Nakajima
fighter, Ki-43, Ki-44 or Ki-84, off the coast of North
Korea. Sufficient aircraft continued in use after the
war for them to be given the NATO reporting name of
Fred. Some American pilots also reported seeing P-63s in
service with North Korea during the Korean War.
In 1945, 114 later models were delivered to the
French Armée de l'Air, but they arrived too late to see
service in World War II. They however saw service during
the First Indochina War before being replaced in 1951.
Numerous surplus P-63s ended up on the air racing
circuit in the immediate postwar era.
Charles Tucker purchased two P-63s from the disposal
facility at Kingman, Arizona just after the war. He
entered one of them, the Tucker Special as Race 28 with
the name Flying Red Horse emblazoned on the nose
(civilian register N62995) in the 1946 Thompson Trophy
race. He had clipped the wing in an attempt to improve
its speed, reducing the span to 25 ft, 9 inches. The
second one (44-4126 (XN63231) was intended for the 1946
Bendix cross country race. It was initially fitted with
two wingtip drop tanks. In 1947, the drop tanks were
removed and the wings were clipped to 28 ft 6 inches.
Two other significant racers were flown later. Tipsy
Miss, John Sandberg's clipped-wingtip P-63 unlimited
racer, was identified as "Race 28," and painted in
bright orange, white and black race numbers with a
chrome spinner. Crazy Horse Campgrounds was the most
radically modified P-63 Kingcobra ever. Larry Haven's
"Race 90" clipped-wing unlimited racer had a tiny bubble
canopy installed; it appeared in all silver (unpolished
aluminum) finish with a white rudder and black trim.
Photo
Gallery
Contact
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Legacy Flight Museum
425 North Airport Road
Rexburg, ID 83440
Tel: (208) 359-5905
Cell: (208) 351-0044
Fax: (208) 356-7989
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Please fill out your contact information
below if you are interested in contacting
the operator, or representative,
of this Warbird and you require more information for booking this
aircraft at your Airshow
or Event.
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