To take Mr. Downing's excellent illustrative exercise on whether or
not you can afford a warbird a few steps further:
If you can flip $1 dollar bills into the fire without flinching while drinking
Bud Light, you can afford an L-bird (L-2, L-3, L-4, L-5, etc.).
If you can flip $5 dollar bills into the fire without flinching while drinking
whatever domestic beer you like, you can afford a PT-bird (PT-17, P-19,
PT-26, etc.).
If you can flip $10 dollar bills into the fire without flinching while drinking
your favorite imported beer, you can afford a BT-13 or a BT-15.
If you can flip $20 dollar bills into the fire without flinching while drinking
your favorite microbrew, you can afford a T-bird (T-6, T-28...maybe).
If you can flip $50 dollar bills into the fire without flinching while drinking
whatever it is you're thirsty for, you can afford one of the "small" fighters
(Yak-9/11, maybe a Wildcat).
And (as Mr. Downing so eloquently stated), if you can flip C-notes into the
fire without flinching while drinking whatever it is you're thirsty for, you
can afford to run on the porch with the big dogs (P-51, Corsair, etc.).
Now I truly understand what champagne taste on a beer budget
means... I can flip $1 dollar bills, $5... maybe $10 dollar bills into
the fire without flinching (too much), but I don't know about $20
dollar bills! Guess I should get a smaller fire, or cheaper drinks,
'cause I can't change my quest to finish & fly the T-6....
One more somewhat serious note... Back when I was 10 years
old (or so) and bought my 1st copy of trade-a-plane, a flying
Mustang could be had for about $75K (a project was about 1/2
that). The next thing I knew, they were $250K, then $500K,
then... (you get the picture). The prices will not go down unless
the whole world falls on it's ass....
When Mustang prices hit a half mil, I switched gears and quit
looking at Mustangs and started looking at the T-6.
Bela P. Havasreti