Thread: Round Engines
View Single Post
  #28  
Old January 21st 06, 05:50 AM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Round Engines

Too many fine airplanes were buried in the sand or dumped
in the ocean. And a lot became beer cans.

If you are in Kansas, go to Hutchinson (HUT) and get a ride
to the Cosmosphere, and you can touch an SR-71 and see a lot
of real space ships.
But if it wasn't for a few rich pilots, you'd never see a
P51 or F86 and the CAF keeps a nice flying history lesson
with FiFi and some other airplanes that were not destroyed
by the Pentagon. Congress keeps passing laws that make
recovery of old warbirds difficult or impossible.

The EAA and Warbirds of America report on this "arms
control."


--
James H. Macklin
ATP,CFI,A&P

--
The people think the Constitution protects their rights;
But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome.
some support
http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.htm
See http://www.fija.org/ more about your rights and duties.


"Dudley Henriques" wrote in
message
nk.net...
|
| "Big John" wrote in message
| ...
|
| Dudley
|
| It's a shame we don't put more effort in saving some of
the historical
| places. Briton and some others put time and money in
saving their
| history for future generations. Makes me ashamed.
|
| Big John
|
| Yeah..it's a shame really. Of course the Brits actually
fought their war
| right over their heads. The people had, and still have
such a high regard
| for what happened during the BOB that they are more than
willing to support
| the historical effort to save the artifacts from the
period.
| It seems that in our country, a lot of the time developers
and politicians
| enter into the equation and the artifact goes into a
museum while the real
| estate where it all happened somehow magically turns into
a shopping mall.
| Of course there are exceptions although many times it's
the work of private
| donors that save a location of historical value to
aviation.
| Dudley
|
|