BigGrey wrote:
Well said Dudley.
To quote from the article: "Tom Cruise's toys are all over the place."
I would imagine it was the reporter who wrote the article who called them toys and not the owner.
Les
I'm sure Lauderback et al deals with the deep pockets issue every time they take on a new client. The trick is to interview carefully and ascertain just where these money guys are with their basic attitude and personality traits as these factors directly relate to staying alive in the high performance environment. Job one for any good instructor/check pilot in this business is to make this evaluation and gear all that follows toward rebuilding any attitude problems detected during this "interview process".
I found that most pilots coming in cold with the bucks to support and operate a warbird, especially a Mustang, F8F, etc, were of the personality type conducive to the operation of a warbird. I found several pilots through my career, mostly coming out of an "inherited wealth" background, who in my opinion shouldn't have been allowed on the same airfield with a Mustang. I managed to change the attitude of one of these pilots; the other one died in a 51.
It's all about attitude really when it comes to operating a high performance airplane....any airplane actually, but especially a warbird.. In my opinion, any pilot going in with good basic skills intact and a solid healthy attitude that's conducive to learning coupled with a deep healthy respect for things that can kill you if you lack the former can be taught to operate a warbird safely.
I always expected pilots going through high performance transition to have deep pockets. The pilots in this group who I considered as the best prospects to operate their airplanes safely were the ones who were more impressed with what was required to handle the airplanes than what was required to support the flying of the airplanes.