Panchito makes a run! — the Mitchell, not the cartoon
Coming in low — just above the tree tops.
Coming in hard — loud and fast, with a war load and four 0.50 caliber machine guns at the pilot’s command.
Four forward firing Browning machine guns and a bomb bay made for a potent weapons delivery system — photo by Joseph May
Panchito, the cartoon, is a pistol packing rooster from a 1945 movie.
Panchito, the original B-25 Mitchell, was manufactured that same year.
Panchito, the one that can be seen flying today, is a slick late model B-25. Most of the paint is for the “Panchito” nose art with the fuselage and wings finished only in brightly polished aluminum.
It is flown on the airshow circuit to help raise funds for charity and does so in spectacular fashion. The day I witnessed her being flown the powerful radial engines pulled her on low fast passes as well as gracefully arced turns. On a high pass one can see an inert bomb in the bomb bay when the bay’s doors are open into the windstream.
More about Panchito and its ancestor can be read in the excellent article called Living History by Larry Kelley and Larry Wilson published by the EAA Warbirds of America in their Warbirds periodical published in July 2003.
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