That is the way it reads and I'm not aware that fire sleeving was used as original equipment until much later (not that it couldn't be retrofitted). Even with fire sleeving that may not have precluded a fire. A leaking fitting can fuel a fire, or a hose could have ruptured regardless of the presence of fire sleeving. Even if you sleeve the fuel lines, that still would not prevent engine oil or hydraulic fluid from catching fire.
Fire needs three things to start- fuel, oxygen and an ignition source. Compared to modern airliners, most warbirds are firetraps. The flow of air (oxygen) is not controlled in any of the compartments, fire sleeving/fire resistant hose materials are not used, there are no fuses in the hydraulic systems to limit flow in the event of a hose rupture, and few aircraft have fire detectors or even an extinguishing system on board.
me109me109 wrote:
bdk wrote:
So they shouldn't have flown it to Oshkosh after it was restored?
Brandon, I agree with flying it one seasons circuit to get the aircraft the credit it truly deserves (ie. OSH and SNF Grand Champion), but to continually fly it would jeopardize the classic piece of Americana that is this aircrafts noseart. As anyone who has ever operated a warbird knows, paint chips/flakes after a while. I'd hate for a piece of art to be scattered across the countryside, wouldn't you?
Well, it wasn't the original nose art, and even the Mona Lisa has been touched up numerous times without dramatically affecting its value. I find it hard to believe that the nose art adds that much value. My guess is that the owner doesn't want to jeapordize the literally perfect no-expense spared restoration of the aircraft to factory new condition by putting a bunch of wear and tear on it. Maybe a "penalty" paid from too nice of a restoration?
