Rob Mears wrote:
No one in their right mind is going to give away their Mustang just to save themselves from being tagged as "greedy". Supply and demand dictate the market and nothing else - same as every other market out there. Does anyone have a '64 split-window Corvette coupe they want to give me for $10K? Come on...don't be greedy! I could build one from raw materials for that much!

Maybe there's a non-profit organization out there that would be willing to turn out brand new P-51s and sell them at cost to the disenfranchised pilots of the world.
If anyone stands to make a decent living by effectively offering P-51s at less than half the going rate, then they will do it. My guess is that R&D, shop costs, licensing, and a dozen other factors (including
demand) will drive the cost right back up to that of the Mustangs currently on the market. I still believe the value of existing warbird types will generally peak out (with some exceptions) when they've reached the threshold at which one could be built from scratch. In the end, investors buy the plane - not the story that comes with it, especially since many of the warbirds flying today are just representations of their former selves.
I'm sure the basic material costs for the Flug Werk 190 is far below what they are asking, but factor in a decade of time and work for the crew, as well as all the R&D that continues to go into making a successful design. They didn't just tape the blue prints on the wall and cut sheet metal on their weekends off.
As for the $225K Corsair project in Florida; if you can put together a team in Russia who can fabricate a
quality main spar section for the Corsair and keep the cost anywhere near relative to what the entire Florida project is selling for, I'll personally help you sell the first five of them at no cost to myself. Value is relative to what one actually knows about a certain aircraft. If you can truly market brand new Mustangs at 1/3 the price of an existing aircraft, then there's a massive niche market out there just screaming for the chance to buy. Makes you wonder why no investors have jumped headlong at the opportunity to make a decent profit doing this. It's probably because there's no profit to be made by doing so.
its not giving away anything, its excessive greed. nobody is saying "give your p-51 away"
and with yaks, the airframe new built from orenburg today is only $140,000 painted and test flown if you supply the engine, ok so lets say the engine is 50k thats 190k the total cost for a new yak9. so why are they being sold now for 400k? the ones built in 1995 are now 400k, they are older airframes than aircraft built today so why are they appreciating?
all it comes down too is greed, its got nothing to do with supply and demand.
you tell me the process of making the corsair spar, it couldnt be as big of a drama as you make it out or 60 years ago they wouldve built easier and cheaper aircraft.