Micawber said:On September 15th too
Diamondback said:I'd propose structuring things so that originals are flown mostly straight-and-level, and new-build replicas (up-built and "re-materialed" to take the extra stress) be the only aircraft used for dogfighting. That way the old birds continue flying, but aren't placed at risk through any "extreme" maneuvers.
Miss Sis said:We had a flyover from a Lancaster and I have to say it is amazing to be that close to a Warbird. It not being an airshow, the pilot was allowed to fly right over us, very low. It really hits you in the stomach, and we all agreed, it makes you feel very proud of those who flew.
Smithy said:Thing is that such "replicas" would be as structurally sound as original restored warbirds. All warbirds which have been restored to airworthy condition have 99% of the time been near to rebuilt especially in terms of airframe and using modern techniques. If we take the Alpine Fighter Collection's original Hurricane IIa, this was recovered from the Russian tundra (and had a service history dating back to the Battle of France) and was completely rebuilt, that includes the structural airframe, spars, etc, etc. WWII fighters were designed to take a hell of a lot of stress and during an airshow display no pilot will be putting the aircraft under the kind of stress that will push an airframe to its absolute limits and that is including standard airshow aerobatics. Unfortunately the majority of accidents involving warbirds - like all aircraft - can be attributed to pilot error rather than structural failure.
I'm with Wingnut on this.The Wingnut said:...the day warbirds are grounded will be the day the world has forgotten about them. Aircraft are living things, they are not meant to sit idle in a museum. A static aircraft is nothing more than an assembled collection of sheetmetal and expensive parts. They do not do what they are meant to do, they deteriorate and become non-airworthy, they cannot be seen moving, they cannot be heard running.