Stephan Wilkinson wrote:
And here we get into the semantics...is a Navion with stars and bars a warplane? A Twin Beech? A Useless 78? A J3? I'm really looking for civilian manufacturers of bomb-dropping, gun-shooting warplanes, with apologies to the L-bird crowd.
And with apologies to John Dupre, what I'm looking for is any major-war aircraft that I will be embarrassed to have overlooked when I write my B-26K article for Aviation History magazine and say that the On Mark airplane is "the only example in living memory of a civil manufacturer having produced a true warbird with a major-war combat record" or something of the sort.
I might suggest changing it from "the only example in living memory of a civil manufacturer having produced a true warbird with a major-war combat record" to something like: "one of very few civilian manufactures producing an aircraft that was used in a front line combat role...." I would avoid absolutes like "only" and other gray areas someone is bound to come up with an example that will turn them off from your article. They will think of things like Cessnas, L-birds, Ayers, Pilatus, Goodyear (under contract) etc. and consider them significant, and numerous aircraft that were later modified for combat use like Condors, C-130's, P-3's ,etc, etc- even if you are trying to emphasize front line combat types. There are also numerous examples of civilian companies making warbirds such as the Mosquito and gliders under license- even furniture companies, piano companies, pullman train companies, etc.