EDowning wrote:
I have from time to time had people come up to me at an airshow and ask me a flurry of super detailed, parts specific questions (serial #, model # of minor components etc.) about my various airplanes.
Hi Eric,
Like some others here, I didn't at first realise this was a serious question. Can you elaborate a bit, as I remain nonplussed?
As an aviation journalist and writer, I regularly ask a lot of detailed questions, but never serial numbers of bits - and I've not heard of that happening before - it's a new one to me of the wide and wild world of aviation enthusiasm. And when I talk to someone they know who I am and why I'm doing it, and generally it's been a mutually useful discussion.
The Reggie spotters (primarily from the UK) are one of the facets of aviation enthusiasm. Some are serious aviators (including pilots) others great people and some, sadly, obsessive idiots who give the rest a bad name. But AFAIK they collect registrations and serials, only.
Perhaps it's worth pointing out that of the vast number of people interested in aviation only a
small percentage are well heeled enough to actually own and operate their own vintage aircraft. The rest of us find cheaper things to do, some play, and some more seriously or even obsessively.
A psychologist would probably be quick to draw comparisons between a person operating a 1940s era military aircraft and someone else, probably less trained and funded, developing a fascination with the same type's technology. Much as we might all argue otherwise, there's few compelling, justifiable reasons to actually operate or preserve 'old airplanes'. (and if anyone's sucking-in breath here, don't beat
me up about 'education' 'commemoration' etc - that's a whole other argument, for another day.)
However general and vintage aviation needs all the friends it can get, faced with the continual assault of the grey people. Maybe we need to figure out how to be inclusive rather than exclusive (and there's some you'd never want in your team, of course...).
Regards,