Sure! Just jump in a Corsair, start 'er up, get 'er going down the runway
and then shove the throttle all the way forward. You'll never forget that
ride down the runway on your back.
A military prop fighter is more difficult to fly safely than is even a
modern jet fighter.
WDA
end
"Stephen Harding" wrote in message
...
Looking over recent photos of the P-38 "Glacier Girl", and reading
all ($$$) that was involved in its restoration, I was wondering...
What's stopping me from laying low during the next air show
and in the early hours of the morning, climbing into the cockpit
of my favorite warbird, and flying it off to my secret hideaway
runway and storage facility where I also keep my illicitly gained
Rembrandts, Van Goghs and pre-Columbian Indian art?
I have read of some British and American pilots, shot down over
Nazi occupied Europe, stealing LW aircraft to make their escapes.
Obviously no "keys" required for startup.
Do restored warbirds have some sort of security system added to
keep unscrupulous members of the public such as me, from taking
one up for an unauthorized flight? Some sort of starting "key"?
What about current military aircraft?
SMH
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