jmkendall wrote:
I agree with the whole mocking thing. Enough already. NOBODY said they would just dig them up and fly them away, NO ONE.
To be fair, the response is toward much of the media reporting which rather tends towards the fill the tyres and off you go...
jmkendall wrote:
Instead of heaping ridicule on this guy we should applaud him for spending HIS MONEY and time to track down and find these potential artifacts.
Well, again that's interesting. Depending on which bit of the story you want to follow, Chap A spent
all his money finding the location, and invited Chap B with more (much more) money in to help. Then, according to Chap A, Mr.B took over and edged Chap A out... Of course that'd
never happen or have happened before...
It's pretty certain that there are some 'crated' aircraft at a known site in Burma. They were protected and cached for possible use
in the near future. The probability is that whatever's there will be in very bad shape; but it is most likely that there'll be enough to give identities and the basis for rebuilds.
Of course the numbers matter in a very different way than discussed so far, and that's the 'glut on a market'.
Spitfires (and Mustangs, and almost nothing else) have a certain cachet and thus financial value, driven by a number of social factors and availability. The
quid pro quo is that there needs to be enough people with real money (and
there's a story of a Spitfire 'sale') to want to buy them or fund the restoration. Adding double digit Spitfires to the world rebuild pool will be - in the long term - A Good Thing. In the short term, it'll be 'interesting' to the number of people who
really, really want to spend what one will cost, given the end value, on exclusivity, will be in certain ways be lowered.
In all the fuss about people who buys Spitfires and how much they sell for, it's often overlooked that there's actually quite a few owners who find owning or restoring turns out to be just
too rich for the blood.
This Burma Spitfires saga will be a long game, and one to watch. It'll be easy to watch, as it's getting top-level PR and political interest, but it isn't going to be quick, or straightforward.
Regards,