K5054NZ wrote:
The Inspector wrote:
Moons ago a civil F-5 (assembled from salvaged parts purchased @ various surplus auctions, sounds of KLAXONS

) and an early A-4 got out amongst the 'great unwashed' and got on the civil registry...
This sounds a very intriguing story! Is there any chance someone could let me (and any other similarly uninformed posters) know more, or simply SNs or N-regs? I'd love to read the story.
The US Civil Register lists the following six F-5 types:
F-5A: N3J, N685TC, N695TC
F-5B: N586PC, N675TC, N8910
There are 40 T-38 types on the US Civil Register. 33 are registered to NASA, 2 are registered to Boeing, and the rest appear to be privately-owned, including museums.
There are 49 A-4 and TA-4 types on the US Civil Register. I'm too lazy to try to figure out who they all belong to. Many are listed in ways that make me think they're private warbirds (we know for sure that several are flying in private/museum hands). The majority are probably operated by contractors who provide training and other services to the US Government. At least one appears to be a training aid at a tech school.
Keep in mind that the fact that a FAA registration exists does not mean the airplane actually exists, or is in any kind of operational condition or in any particular state of completeness.
K5054NZ wrote:
reg sched shred thread.
Lemme hear ya say
that phrase three times in rapid succession!