I agree that older, more 'sheet of tin' aircraft can be brought back with enough money and time but both the A4 and the Rhino are mid 50's design technology. If, forty five years from now someone stumbled onto an abandoned EUROFIGHTER airframe that had been completely stripped of all it's wiring and electronics and computers, it most likely couldn't fly again as that individual would need to design and manufacture computers and wiring harnesses and connecters to make the flight controls operate, and the airframe would have most likely have been 'de-milled' with DOTCOs making safe repairs all but impossible to the average guy. "Tom, I'm gonna turn the two car garage into a big autoclave" won't happen unless you are Paul Allen. Nothing is impossible, but I doubt that TITANIC will ever make port. There is a vast ocean of difference between the good Doctor patching his SE5 with a shirttail and some pot glue and doing the complex math of how many laminations and in which specific directions in what order, under what heat and pressure you need to repair the big hole that was cut out of your newly aquired CFRP jet hulk.
I'm concerned when I see that Ben DeBumpa has smacked the barriers in his F-1 ride, tearing off all the suspension and destroying the right side of the car, yet it's back on the grid the next morning. I don't recall seeing Peter Matchett showing us the portable autoclave that FERRARI carries around to each race to do proper repairs. As the driver, I'd be pretty spooked about climbing into something that was repaired using duct tape to hold the parts while the bonding was agent cured overnight by a mechanic using a handheld heat gun and then going 200+ MPH

but then I have at least a rudimentary understanding of tensile strength and shearing forces.
Basically, a MORGAN +4 and a MAZDA MX 5 are both sports cars, one can be fixed and maintained with little more than a pair of pliers, a keyhole saw, a screwdriver, and a small hammer. The other one is so computer reliant and computer driven that Joe Average cannot maintain it properly tuning it 'by ear' old, Flintstones technology vs. computer driven technology. Example, if the 'check engine' light comes on in your new car, it's usually because you didn't screw the gas cap down tight enough last fill up, you can go to the dealer and have it reset with a computer plug-in or tighten and loosen the gas cap yourself about 95 times to reset the sensor, but, since the gas cap is part of the closed loop system of the powertrain, the sensor gets activated.