The330thbg said:
Quote:
Seeing a warbird in a museum is a little like looking at a dinosaur in a natural-history museum.
Big and impressive to be sure, but also dead, cold and silent.
I am one WIXer who is very big in old airplanes AND dinosaurs (I am a paleontologist). I appreciate 330th's sentiments, but maybe dinosaurs can give us some perspective.
Original dinosaur bones are fragile things. Even though they have lasted 100 million years, exposure to open air and water and they are quickly destroyed - sounds familiar, right?
There are dinosaur skeletons on display outdoors, but these are not original bones, but fiberglass. The fiberglass does not reduce their educational potential, but if you want to see the REAL THING you have to go inside.
Likewise, an original P-38 should not be "on a stick" in the elements. It should either be on static display in an indoor museum, or it can be in a hanger, airworthy for occasional use outside in good weather. True, there is risk that the plane might be completely destroyed in a crash, but there are enough static specimens preserved indoors that some can also be flown, since that also serves an important educational purpose.
So long as there are more than a very few specimens in existence, the type can be - and perhaps SHOULD BE - used educationally both ways.
One view expressed on this thread is that any airplane not being flown is DEAD, that all planes - even the 1903 Wright (!!) should still be flown. Taking are truly rare and historic airplane outdoors and making it airworthy would destroy the original plane's originiality - its soul - and would ultimately reduce that plane to dust. Dinosaurs belong in an indoor museum, and the very rare and historic plane with most of the original parts, including perhaps the very fingerprints of its builders and early flyers, belong there as well. Dead? Maybe, but it retains its soul and preserves a direct conection between us and its original builders.
An airplane with most of its parts replaced to make it airworthy serves an educational purpose. It provides the noise and sense of awe not communicated by the static display. I see no problem with flying such aircraft, so long as there is a more historic example preserved indoors. But the replacement of its parts and the many other altercations made to spruce it up and fly it destroy portions of that connection between us and the pioneers.
I have no objection to someone restoring a Conestoga wagon and using it with a team of horses. The restoration will mean the use of replacement wood and new paint. There is much to be said for seeing a real Conestoga used as they once were, so long as a better original one is preserved and can be seen indoors. Places like the Smithsonian and NMUSAF preserve such things, and allow us to justifyably use other examples in the air or behind a team of horses.
But anyone who advocates the use of (the original) Memphis Belle as a flyer is advocating in some way at least the destruction of an original example with a combat history. Call it a dinosaur if you want, but I want people of a hundred years from now the opportunity to see and be able to study that dinosaur.
We can have static aircraft and flying aircraft, were there are adequate surviving examples. Anyone who says that all examples have to be one way or the other is speaking the same kind of polarizing extremism that we see too often with too many political and other issues. Let us be fair to one another enough to appreciate that some should be displayed and some can be flown. But if we were to fly them all, there would be a time too soon when they all would not be dead, they would be extinct.