B-29 Super Fort wrote:

Quote:
BURBANK, Calif. — Tom Cruise's toys are all over the place.
There are the 16 motorcycles sprinkled about his private hangar at the Burbank airport: an antique Norton, a vintage Harley, an Indian built by Steve McQueen. There are a couple of roadsters, including a 1958 two-seater Corvette (a gift from his wife, Katie Holmes).
And there are his favorites: five airplanes, from an aerobatic biplane to a 1933 crop duster to his prize, a P-51 World War II fighter that once belonged to the Tuskegee Airmen.
The vehicles are all sizes, ages, value. But they share this: handled carelessly, these fast machines would spell the end of the star.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/new ... yrie_N.htm
Don't know Cruise; never met the guy, but I've been fooling around with P51's and big money for most of my life in aviation.
There are guys with deep pockets who have done very well "playing around" with toys like a P51, and there are guys with deep pockets who haven't done well at all.
Aircraft like the 51 are not toys. You remember that and you can live a very long time exposed to them. Forget it for a nano-second and you can become a hole in the ground that money can't fill.
I wish Cruise the very best with all his aviation endeavors.
I had a sign hanging over my desk in the flight office for many years that read,
"Money and horsepower don't necessarily equate"
I sincerely hope Cruise and everyone else with deep pockets and a yen to try their hand at flying these machines might read these words and remember them well.
Dudley Henriques