SaxMan wrote:
As tough as it is saving airplanes in terms of labor and money, saving a ship requires many times the magnitude of both, and unlike an airplane, it's near impossible to bring a ship "inside" once it is saved, and preservation is a never ending process.
I agree 100%.
When groups or cities take on such a large project, they almost always forget that when these ships were earning their keep, they had large crews that handled painting and keeping things in running order. Once a ship is mothballed, those guys and gals walk off the gangplank and never come back. It's left up to a volunteer force that is
never staffed to keep up with basic preventative maintenance. So, years go by, said ship slowly deteriorates, and the city then screams, "why won't anyone step in and provide the funds to keep this hole in the water afloat?"
Serious lack of foresight can be observed with the vast majority of museum ships today when someone first signs on for a crushing level of responsibility. I applaud all those who take these projects on, but I also question the sanity of doing so.
With an airplane, once you restore it, you can put it into a climate controlled building and for the most part, it'll be in that condition for many years with minimal work done (assuming you don't fire it up or fly it, that is). Same thing with a railroad steam locomotive, for the most part.
But with a ship, once you do even a full dry dock restoration, you've only re-set the clock which starts ticking again the second you let water back into the drydock again...
The USS Texas group was looking to get her out of the water (by daming up the back side of the display space and draining the water out, having the ship sitting on blocks as she would in drydock), but of course lack of funds killed that for now. Having seen this great battleship in September, I agree that's the best for her and ships like her. If you're never going to fire up the boilers again anyway, I see no need to have water surrounding the vessel in terms of longterm preservation.