Nathan wrote:
Top 3:
The F-94 (less then a dozen surviving examples)
The F-89
The P/F-80
Why there is a definite lacking in the top 3 is beyond me.
I offer that "sexiness" or lack thereof, mission, looks, and war record may have something to do with it. None were considered good looking, hair on fire, pure fighters. Kids did not build models and dream of being a Starfire pilot, and they never had a movie centered on them. The F-89 and F-94 did not play in major combat- the F-80 was more of a footnote to most in Korea, and primarily in the much less glamorous air to ground mission- we here on WIX know it played a more significant role, and even got a few kills. Two were interceptors, and sitting on strip alert in North Dakota does not have the same alure as tangling with MiGs over the Yalu.
The F-86 is the jet that the public remembers from Korea. Single seat fighters defintitly had more alure, and would be higher on a museum must have list. Straight wing jets appear rapidly antiquated when compared to designs coming out at nearly the same time. Few straight wing F-84 are around for likely the same reasons. So these three went to scrap in large numbers as few cared to save more. B-45 met a simialr fate, and as quemford point out, are quite rare today (with a notably low production run and service life).
The three you mention had very limited or zero post service life in civil service, training, experiments, target towing etc which tends to result in some airframes lasting much longer that their first line roles. The F-86 was produced by several lines in several countires, and were used as drones, adversaries and as first and second string fighters by many airforces for decades after front line US service- this led to many more survivors.
The F-94 is a staight wing, two seater, with an ugly nose and awkward swept stab. No export.
The F-89 is a straight wing brutish, ugly two seater. No export
The P/F-80 was a straight wing fighter, rapidly eclipsed by the much more glamorous F-86. Export, but mostly to minor air forces with no major combat history overseas.