Question 2)
Also, in my Great Book of WWII Airplanes, it is stated that some P-51B/C's had 6x .50 cals. Is this correct? I have never seen another source. The same book illustrates some P-51B/C's (by the same artist) with P-51D wings, where the P-51D-type kink in the leading edge is prominent and I don't think that's correct at all.
This is where history becomes a pest and a problem - I've read a few times P51C's carried 6x 50s, not sure which company in the 50s and 60s read wikipedia, however this information was incorrect.
I've made posts in the wishlist in the past about "prototypes" and other things that were incorrect and was called on it, now If I can't figure out something I ask someone like AKAK what his opinion would be, or someone who would know the information.
Basically there is a lot of guessing involved, for example the Russian airforce - its nearly impossible to get decent material on Russian birds during WW2, or Japan for that matter.
Why? Japan was bombed into the stone age, factories that produced the aircraft were bombed, so where else would the golden egg be?
Most common mistakes are usually "prototypes" for example in one thread someone declared the Ki-84 flew with 4x 20mm cannons, however from what I gather it had 3 prototypes, one crashed - so a third had to be made, it wasn't put into production.
Gun packages are another, for example German Field Modification Kits - some housed up to 6x 20mms per wing - looks great on paper, but the idea wore off once you realize at this time there were hundreds of escorts - and a fighter that couldn't turn - and had to fly a straight line into bombers - was a sitting duck.