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#4
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"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 In theory it could be done, but the pilot doing it would have to be REAL good! :-)) Just the pre-requesites are daunting to say the least. First, the pilot doing this would have to be good enough to actually fly the airplane, which not only requires specific skills but is aircraft specific also. That means the thief would have to know where everything is in the cockpit....probably in the dark . A self inspired night checkout in the average warbird would kill all but the most "inspired" I can assure you!! :-))) A lot of the guys have a padlock setup on their canopies or doors in the case of multi-engine stuff. Some aircraft canopy design allows for a hole in the canopy track you can padlock. I never used one. Security was usually supplied for me/ and/or the airplane was inside all the time. Generally, the feeling in the warbird community when I was active was that with normal security, you really didn't spend all that much time worrying about someone stealing the airplane. There have been cases in the military of enlisted people "borrowing" an aircraft for a joyride. I remember one incident back in the fifties when a crew chief was taxi testing an F86D and decided on the spot to fly it. They got him back down somehow and promptly arrested him. Some other idiot "stole a B25 down at Keesler and got it into the air somehow. He lost an engine, then tried a turn into his dead left engine at about 100kts. Needless to say, he morted as the airplane went into the gulf off the beach at Biloxi. Bottom line....it's possible......but considering the fact that the pilot would first have to be current in type and motovated to steal the airplane; the available window for potential would be theives is quite small I would imagine. Dudley |
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