by oz rb fan » Sat Jun 03, 2017 8:35 pm
oh Brad.......so store them all away?.....if it wasnt for the warbird movement alot of these planes and even types wouldn't exist....failures like what happened to the seavixen even happen to new planes(and the pilot did his job PERFECTLY)...the Corsair i think you will find was also a failure that why he put her down on the grass strip.
your right we have lost roughly a mustang a year..........but look closely some if not most are returning to the sky...you can easily built a P51,Spitfire or even a P40 from scratch....as well as the really rare stuff,4 of the 5 flying Zero's are brand new,same with the FW190's and ME262s flying(though Paul Allens will be original).
if it wasnt for the warbird movement would you have the Russian warbirds we all enjoy both in flight or on the ground....the Tyabb you point out is a 2004 model.....not a rebuild but BRAND new.
and when they are all finally grounded.....what then.......just take the mosr common fighter.........according to the Mustang mustang web site there are currently 175 airworthy mustangs,with another 40 under restoration...are there enough museum to take all of those.......or scrap the excess? add to that around 50 or so Spitfires a dozen or so hurricanes and 30 + P40's and you have a problem....the owners will want their hard earned and spent money back......but most museums dont have that kind of money,so go back to the 50'd and 60's where they were left to rot around airstrips around the world?
Museums have their place,but so to do flying warbirds and while we can they should be flownespecially if like the 4 fighters i named above there are multiple airframes around,if there is only one in a museum it should be but as we are seeing at the moment there types that literally can be built from scratch(look at how much REAL 1939 metal in in the Mk1 spitfire that was recovered from Calais..the pics of the recovery are out there)
as for the Mig 21's.....we have already had one fly here and the one i think your talking about was flying in the US when the guy bought it,so it has some known history.