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This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
When I think about aircraft that a specific enthusiast "should" restore, based on their expertise, attention to detail, and affinity for the unique, there's one aircraft that comes to mind for Rod Lewis to consider restoring to flying, because I think he would do it justice: The Ki-45 "Nick".
There's even an intact fuselage at Udvar-Hazy that presumably could be used for some patterning:
Would make a splendid companion to the Mosquito in the air, in terms of an additional two-engined hot rod of an airplane. A man can dream, can't he?
Dennis7423 wrote:When I think about aircraft that a specific enthusiast "should" restore, based on their expertise, attention to detail, and affinity for the unique, there's one aircraft that comes to mind for Rod Lewis to consider restoring to flying, because I think he would do it justice: The Ki-45 "Nick".
There's even an intact fuselage at Udvar-Hazy that presumably could be used for some patterning:
Would make a splendid companion to the Mosquito in the air, in terms of an additional two-engined hot rod of an airplane. A man can dream, can't he?
- Dennis S. Thornton, CO USA
Dennis, I truly like how you think.
No one can deny that the Toryu was an absolute brute. Great woe to the PT boat or unescorted B-24 that crossed its path...
And to make/keep one flyable, dimensionally the R-1830 would be close enough to do the trick.
But without actual wings and empennage--or the engineering drawings to replicate--a flyable Toryu can only remain a dream...so sad.
Perhaps a more-viable alternative is an R-2000-powered Ki-100?
Is it definite that only the fuselage survives? I feel like I've read that they may have the rest of the airframe somewhere? NASM has some really cool stuff waiting in the wings TA-152, BV-155, JU-388, AR-196, B6N, B7A, N1K, J7W, C6M, Kikka, P1Y...etc etc etc! Sadly, I don't think half of these will be complete in my lifetime, but at least they're still with us.
John Norman has been up close with the original Spirit of St. Louis at the Smithsonian at least three times, taking measurements, making tracings, and other research work off it for his flying clone.
With regard to Rod Lewis, it would be quite a shift in his collection if a warbird from any of the Axis forces were added.
NASM also has the wings. The fuselage was cleaned in the wild few months before UH opened, I think their resources then were very spread out and so the wings and engines were put aside until "later." The drive to get things out of Garber and into UH subsided soon after.
Wasn't there someone a few years back that had collected enough Ki-46 Dinah remains to bring one back? I always liked the sleekness of the Dinah III. An attractive and quick bird.