There are a couple of businesses that have cockpits they take to airshows so people can get photos taken in them. At least one has Thunderbirds markings on one side and Blue Angles in the other. I've seen T-33 and Phantom cockpits used. Unlike the UK-centric hobby, I'm pretty sure these cockpits are stripped for ease of access and safety rather than authenticity.
A couple of months back at our local GA field, I saw the front fuselage (the complete nose to just behind the front seats) of a late '60s "pointy nose" Cessna 310 stuffed into the bed of a pickup. I have no idea of its eventual use...display, kids toy or simulator (it would be neat with 3 big screen TV's hooked up to Flight Simulator. One could live all sorts of
Sky King fantasies while flying over the virtual West).
In the mid-90s I was TDY to Davis-Monthan to conduct some training there, and I stopped by one of the scrapyards nearby to buy some display pieces for my den. The proprietors said they had just scrapped a recently released F-105 but kept h the front fuselage and cockpit thinking it might be worth something. I wonder where it is now?
You're right, "cockpitting" is a big hobby in the UK.
FlyPast magazine often has stories about it and sponsors an annual "cockpit-fest" which culminates with awards.
I suppose the hobby is an offshoot of digging up wrecks (natural since they have so many neat and nearby warbird bits to dig up) and the UK passion for collecting in general.
Why isn't it popular here? Most people live too far from D-M to easily get them, and warbird fans here are more likely to spend their time and money actually flying (a warbird or even a GA type) than making half of a static display.
Last edited by
JohnB on Wed Nov 21, 2018 9:24 am, edited 4 times in total.