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No, jets are not warbirds. The name warbirds was directed towards WW2 planes from the 60s up until now. I spent the last 40 years of my life calling WW2 planes warbirds and am not open minded enough to allow toy airplanes into that defined group. WW2 planes were called warbirds before the jet age became available to the general public to play with. Helicopters are not warbirds either and just seem to exist to make irritating noise to bother people. Come up with a new name to call jets and leave the real warbirds alone.
So there!
Regardless of when the name "warbirds" was derived, it is a name given to an aircraft that performed serivce in the military, that is now maintained/operated by civilians. Regardless of type of motor or date of manufacture the term warbird is an umbrella term. If you wish to have a prejudice, that it is fine but your prejudice should not diminishes the value or contribution that the "modern"day aircraft has provided and can now be branded a WARBIRD.
BE PROUD TO PRESERVE AVIATION HISTORY REGARDLESS OF TYPE/VINTAGE...
TO ALL THOSE THAT HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO PRESERVATION OF AVIATION HISTORY ..... THANK YOU!
**WIKKIPEDIA
Warbird is a term used to describe vintage military aircraft. Although the term originally implied piston driven aircraft from the World War II era, it is now often extended to include all military aircraft, including jet powered aircraft, that are no longer in military service. Sometimes, the term "Warbird "also applies to newly built replicas of vintage aircraft, such as Allison V-1710 powered Yak-9s from Yakovlev, Me 262s built by the Me 262 Project and FW 190s by Flug Werk.