bdk wrote:
DaveM2 wrote:
“Original: A specimen that can be shown to be in the original as-built configuration, or as modified by the user, that remains unaltered from the time it ended operational service.” He gives Spirit of St Louis as an example.
I understand that the original fabric was torn off of the Spirit of St. Louis by souvenir hunters after it landed in Paris and was replaced sometime later. If so, is it still original?
A often repeated (probably press) exaggeration.
There is a famous photo (I happened to be looking at the other day) by Charles E Brown of it in the hangar at Le Bourget under guard. There are some rips in the fabric, but nothing more than that.
Warbirdcrew - no, like most national level collections, the NASM's aircraft do not fly. That's why airworthy warbirds, generally are less original than static examples. (And why 'airworthy' while very important, isn't 'the best' standard for originality. It's great for aircraft that fly, obviously.)
Quote:
I will on the other hand restate my original question: does replacing one part at a time make an airplane more original than one where many parts are replaced at the same time?
The big confusion people have is 'between 'in service' replacement, and in preservation replacement.
The Swoose is a good example of the importance of that difference.
And there's different historical values to a 'factory fresh' aircraft (tells you a lot about how they were made) and an 'ex-service' example (tells you a lot about how they were used.)
HTH.