Well, that assessment you were given comes somewhat as a surprise to me, but then I've only been working on her for five years or so.

I'm still sorting out interphone jack connections and the like, but as you can see from my photos, essentially all the wiring is there. There are no missing pieces of avionics as far as I know, but I'll caveat that with the proviso that we are still researching some of the pieces of equipment carried on 6 August 1945, and we occasionally get a surprise from unexpected quarters.
Taigh gave an excellent summary of where we are on the restoration, and I always jump at the chance to work with him when he comes to town. I don't mean to minimize the amount of work left to do - it's even a source of puzzlement for the aircraft's Curators that we keep coming back to them for permission to get up in her, but we continue to discover more tiny things to correct/add. For example, power cable fabrication for the countermeasures gear that I donated in the radar compartment still remains as one of my major "to dos". We are [i]still[\i] constantly discovering small mounting holes in places we never noticed before, and have to figure out what went there despite the lack of detailed plans or pictures from that date in August. Most recently we fond some small mounting holes on the radio operator's and navigator's tables that had puzzled me for some time. Bernie brought a sheaf of photos from Bockscar that were taken in about July 1945 that showed a pair of ash trays there. Just having to have a couple of 1936 Ford ash trays in zinc chromate from my personal collection, I brought them down to Udvar-Hazy on one of our finishing touch visits and they fit the holes perfectly! I need to update the photos on my website with some of the latest views, because we are still adding little details like that. For those with an interest in weird details, there are some other views of the aircraft in odd places on my website, like those at
http://aafradio.org/flightdeck/Peripherals.html (ash trays and the plywood floor on the radar compartment are under the "miscellaneous" link, for example.)
I could go on for hours, but I'll follow Taigh's outstanding example of brevity and stop while I'm ahead.
Best wishes,
Mike Hanz