Saville wrote:
Ok so let's say you can go back in time and make those purchases. We'll ignore how you'll bring back the several thousand dollars you'd need to buy the planes (today's dollars bills would land you in jail most probably).
No problem. You need to convert your cash into a commodity that is valuable then as well as now -- say gold, or better yet, diamonds and other precious stones that are easily transportable.
What if you don't have a lot of gold and diamonds lying around? (if you did, you probably bought your dream warbird already). Again, no problem -- remember, we have a time machine! How about going back to ancient Egypt and cleaning out the tombs in the Valley of the Kings (but, be sure to leave King Tut alone). History only records that they were looted some time in the past -- why not by us? (at least we'll put it to some good use) Don't like taking some precious artifacts to save others? Then perhaps you can beat the rush and go back to 1847 to pan for gold at Sutter's Mill. Or grab your SCUBA gear and help yourself to the cargo off a freshly sunken Spanish treasure galleon like the Atocha. The possibilities are endless.
Saville wrote:
But suppose your time machine doesn't allow you to take the planes with you traveling forward in time. And suppose you DO want to come back in time. The time machine is only big enough to bring you forward.
Well with my vast fortune I could find some remote patch of land in Nevada or Alaska (that I will have purchased in the future) -- dissassemble the airframes, "pickle" them, pack them, and bury them somewhere on what will become my private property.
Saville wrote:
What would you do with the airplanes so that you could legally and with confidence, get them when you returned to 2007?
The other thing I would do is make a stop in 1958 and donate the money needed to acquire USS Enterprise (CV-6) as a museum ship, collect as many naval aircraft types as possible, and create an endowment (probably in the form of IBM and Coca-Cola stock) to ensure the maintence of the entire collection on into the future.
Technically, in that case I would not be able to "get them," but it would be possible for anyone at all to see them -- and to learn first hand about this revolutionary technology, the pioneers who led the way, and the sacrifices that were made to guarantee our way of life.