Nathan wrote:
Steve wrote:
I seriously agree with that. Fly her!!

Remember this is an aircraft that was lost, with its crew through ignorance and inexperience on it's first mission.
The
history is her
loss.
Imagine, for a moment, you're the guide standing at an airshow with a flying
Lady be Good. How do you explain to the public that this
was the wreckage of the story, but it's flying now? You would just confuse people.
Who is going to pay to restore it to fly anyway? There's no queue forming waving cash.
There's more to history than getting off on airplanes flying over.
Django wrote:
If they want to build a museum and reconstruct the crash site, then that is fitting for the aircraft and the crew. I wish them luck. Now if it just continues to rot away uncared for, then that would be a different story.
Thanks Django. Bear in mind that the aircraft is currently not 'rotting away' - but is actually better preserved (now and in the immediate future) and better protected than, say some of the aircraft at places like Lackland AFB.
Much of the 'damage' was due to souveniring and looting; many of those pieces ending up at the NMUSAF. Better there than vanished, but they should be with the aircraft, and the aircraft should be displayed 'as found' in a diorama. IMHO, that should be at the new museum in Libya, but a bad second would be at the NMUSAF.
sgt hawk wrote:
I saw an early morning TV broadcast with the new ambassador from LYBYA in Houston TX (they have established their consulate there) He is lobying the TX oil companies for their technology and expertise on oil exploration. This would be a good time for one of you Houston guys to put a bug in somebody's ear and make the LBG part of the negotiations. Maybe we can get her back. We can argue the restoration crap after possesion is established(sounds like Swamp Ghost don't it).
Thanks for the insight! There's a great opportunity for those oil companies to make much better political capital by helping to establish a museum in Libya. Incidentally, we
should 'argue the restoration crap' at time of purchase or donation.
I don't see what's so hard about spreading the good stuff around, but then I've found it worth travelling to other places to see what they've got and how they do it. Packed 'mine-mine-mine' toyboxes don't do it for me, sorry.
Just some thoughts,