Chad Veich wrote:
I too thought converting the only remaining night fighter Lightning back to single seat configuration was a bad idea. At least the hardware should have been kept with the airframe to convert it back rather than being sold off. Imagine that airplane now, converted back to P-38M configuration, and finished in an all black scheme. Ah well, I can dream anyway. The Spitfire was not converted back to single seat but simply had the rear bubble removed and a piece of sheet metal installed. From what I've been told everything still remains in the rear cockpit and conversion back to two place would not be too difficult.
I totally agree with you! Imagine how awesome that M model would be on the airshow circuit and it's uniqueness! It would be the coolest P-38 out there flying! Don't get me wrong, as I enjoy ANY flying P-38, but I really can't believe no one else has tackled the various versions of the P-38 in their restorations. How about a droop snoot version! How cool would that be, and you would be able to take people up for a ride in a more comfortable fashion that they do now. I applaud museums like the Yanks Air Museum at Chino, who have restored their P-38 back to totally stock F-5 standards, complete with cameras. That plane is the best! It's just too bad that it will probably never fly again, other than a possible one-time ferry flight to the new Yanks Museum whenever it gets completed. But you have to give them credit for doing something other than the standard P-38 restoration!
I understand that the second seat and it's hardware is still with the CAF with the "Scatterbrain" project. Does anyone know how hard it would be to convert a fairly stock single-seater P-38 to "M" standards and install that second seat? Is it fairly easy, or would it require major re-engineering?
That's nice to know about the Spitfire. Hopefully, some day, it will get converted back to it's former glory.
"Droop snoot and M models, all the way!"