bdk wrote:
So how many "dataplate restoration" Mustangs are out there?
Of course that all depends on how much original NAA-produced material was used within the project that one judges to be "enough" to sway the difference between a restoration and a dataplate-rebuild/reproduction/new-build, etc. I lean more in the direction too that there really haven't been
that many "dataplate" Mustangs, outside of say the B/C's (i.e., my definition of dataplate rebuilds being the examples that exist today that didn't exist as a complete aircraft outside of paperwork or metal buried in the ground prior to the start of the project - generally the ones where their history suddenly stops in the 40's/50's and suddenly picks up again in the 90's/2000's, etc.).
As for the whole "replica" thing. I've never thought that the term "replica" is accurate for a newbuild/reproduced warbird that is accurate/the exact same as an original (if it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, yada yada yada). The term replica, in the sense of warbirds, to me, refers to any one of the scaled-down Mustangs/Spitfires, etc., or the Flugwerk Fw-190's, which in a good number of ways are a departure from the originals, and are only in a general sense an "image" of an original airplane. Some guys, on the Key forum in particular, I think like to use the term "replica" to describe "dataplate restorations" or "newbuilds", only because they know the term can be/is regarded as something of "less than" - such as calling the Mk.1's like P9374 and N3200 "replicas", while in another sentence also referring to the Jurca Spitfires and Spitfire 26's as also being "replicas" - as if they were all somehow equal to that term. The irony is that these same Spitfires, P9374 and N3200 in particular, are among/at the top of the most accurate/authentic/true to the originals of any Spitfires flying.