My mother said, always wear clean underwear and never argue with a guy with a gun. She din't mention missiles.
Randy Haskin wrote:
But for any other operational military aircraft, the configuration, parts, paintjob, or the like could be different from day to day.
Absolutely. In fact,
guarenteed to be different, day to day. Keeps a lot of people, me included, busy trying to track that changing situation.
Randy Haskin wrote:
Looking at a specific serial number on a specific component, with the thought that it might be "original", is simply ridiculous -- from a museum, collector, operator, or any other standpoint.
Not ridiculous at all. It's just a sliding scale of originality. In the specific case of nationally accredited museum. Warbird operators aren't fulfilling that job.
A (national level, military) museum wants the aircraft as 'original' as possible - that is straight from service, with those mixed grey parts with front-line use, as you describe.
They'll settle for replacement (inert, perhaps) parts from the stores to take it back to military configuration; they aren't original to that type at the time, but they are the next best thing.
If the can't get those they'll fabricate replacement parts - properly, tagged to show that they are new, and not part of the original machine.
If they get the aircraft after it's been operated in civil hands, either for work or fun, they'll want to take out the mods to take it back to the military configuration - sometimes easy, sometimes difficult, but removing a part of that aircraft's history to get back to the history that's important to them.
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James, the basis of our difference is this: I don't think that anything magical happens the day the airplane stops serving in the military and becomes owned/operated/maintained by a civilian.
Nothing 'magic' but certainly fundamental. It's no longer a military operated aircraft, it's doing a different job, under different rules and entering a new phase of it's history. (In the civil job, it's certainly rare the munitions are live, those gun bays become luggage racks or hold inert ammo; which I'd conclude you'd be disappointed to tote at the moment.) Eric's Skyrader is a civilian aircraft operated for pleasure and demonstration - your F-15 is a military tool, owned and operated by the US military for the US people - even on a 'who pays' basis, let alone purpose it's different. You, or the machine retires from the military, different rules, expectations and so forth.
If Pensacola get a Martin Mars from FT Inc, they would rip out the firefighting gear, maybe take the engines back to the earlier version, paint it dark blue - it would then represent it's Naval history, despite the fact that its civilian life outweighs that by a factor of decades. They are declaring its (minor) military career is more important than it's significant civil career. However, there's no argument that the reconstruction to military configuration would be 'inauthentic' for the FT era, while the FT scheme and fit isn't authentic for the Navy career. Both are real and 'original' but they are different things. Of course standard engine items fitted by FT engineers would be doing the same job as those fitted by the earlier Navy crew; and that's detail of interest only to an owning curator and the type's historian. But FT adding up-rated engines takes the aircraft from it's authentic Navy guise to something, yes, unoriginal to it's
Navy career.
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I don't think there's anything uniquely special about military service which allows an airplane to be overhauled, rebuilt, maintained, and yet still be 'original'....yet if the same thing happens with a civilian owner, it is suddenly 'not original'. That basic fact does not compute for me.
Originality isn't an absolute, but a matter of degree.
Randy Haskin wrote:
Perhaps it's because I fly military airplanes on a daily basis that there is not a mystique there. ...
I consider myself an astute student of military aviation and history. I also consider myself very detail oriented when it comes to specific aircraft.
No 'mystique' for me either, despite some of the romantic notions that float around here, and I'd agree you are a great student of aviation history. I'm arguing a nitpicky curatorial point - most of the time for most of us, an utter irrelevance. But if you want to show someone the real thing in a museum, it's likely you'll want to be able to trust them about it's originality.
A curatorial approach is a different thing. If you want to know what's 'original' and 'authentic' and what's an 'accurate recreation' or another part supplied later by Orville on the 1903 Wright Flyer, you can - because it's a internationally important heritage aircraft for us all, and it's been properly documented. It's a long way from the December 17, 1903 aircraft, but we know what's what about it, as we should.
Finally, as soon as an ex-military aircraft flies in civilian hands there are compromises from originality; that just a fact, and it's not a bad thing. As Forgotten Field's pointed out, some of those are like GPS navigation, and so forth. Most of the time those differences don't matter, but if the real history is the whole complete story, then you have a reason to explore those deviations.
There's been a general trend towards greater authenticity in Warbirds, and that's generally a great thing. You can have your Sea Fury with a Texan flag to, and that's a cool one also. If someone wants to fly their aircraft and have fun, that's a great thing, and not to get wound up about originality. But just sometimes, and for special cases, knowing what's what's worth it.
I was disappointed when this thread vanished. Like, I hope others here, it's been an interesting experience now it's back!
Oh, Randy, I live in South Island New Zealand, 'X' marks the spot, don't blow up the sheep in error.
Regards,