2.07 Release Notes:
They did not "change" the P-51 model specifically. They made a sweeping change to the flight model that affected all planes.
Yeah, yeah, all planes lost some turn performance, already knew this.
But it has been demonstrated that some planes were effected more deleteriously than others, Mustang among them.
Widewing made some good posts on it if anyone cares to search, no real need to repeat all that stuff here.
The one thing no one has ever explained to me was how Allied pilots could be so completely and totally wrong about the relative turning qualities of the Mustang, relative other Allied aircraft with which they had familiarity, like the Typhoon and Jug, and relative enemy aircraft in combat. It was realized very quickly that the Zero had P-40s and Wildcats completely outclassed in turning. It was also realized that 109s had the advantage over P-47s in this regard. But if the AHII modeling of relative turning capacity is correct, the Mustang is even less of a turner than the P-47. Thus, we are to believe that pilots were handed a new ride that was less maneuverable than the old one, flew it, somehow formed a completely wrong conclusion about its relative maneuverability vs the Jug, took it into combat, managed (as can be indisputably demonstrated) to win many turning contests against 109s with a machine less maneuverable than the P-47 they thought was unsuited for such a task. Not only that, but apparently German pilots also managed to form a completely wrong impression about the turning qualities of the P-51 relative the P-47. Does this make any sense to
anyone?