I was at Oshkosh around 1990, and saw the first one imported into the U.S. and it was being flown by a couple of Brits. At this point I had transferred to the Air Natl Guard, and had a crew chief friend, a mechanic for American Eagle with me. The Brits told me "It's the T-3 Firefly, the newest trainer for the U.S. Air Force." WE both laughed as that was beyond comprehension, because doing a walkaround, it looked like a piece of junk. We both agreed there was no way the U.S. military would let a piston engine acft. back into the inventory, much less a foreign design. It was sitting on the line with the T-34's and L-17 Navion's and no one was even stopping to look at it. It's that "F"UGLY!
A few years later I talked to a couple of "butterbars" that had done their initial flight screening in it. I few things I vaguely remember were that it could only do limited aerobatics, snap rolls could cause tail separation, engine overheating and the aircraft were being used out west, and theree wasn't enough room in the seats to wear U.S.military parachutes, so they did their flight screening without parachutes!
I think the aircraft also has composite materials in the construction that were not suited for the U.S. southwest.
That being said, I would take one for the right price in a heartbeat, just to tool around in. I think, if possible the Air Force should put them back in the system for pilot profiency hacks and morale flights for the ground maintenace personnel. Units used to have "hacks" around for that reason.
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