Falcon10 wrote:
I am about 1/2 mile from the departure end of 25 at Vansant airport. I have inquired through flying with them about towing and the Insurance Mins are a lot more than what I have logged. I know we have digressed from the warbird theme but thanks for everyones responses and I hope this helps other "uts" in getting started toward their dreams.
If you're out at VanSant, Say hi to Quentin Marty who has the PT-13 there... tell him Ryan from Geneseo says hi. He's always one to offer the front hole of the Stearman to a friend if its empty.
One thing that I can say might help is seeking your A&P... sure it's a lot of work, but build the practical experience of working on warbirds and all of a sudden you become twice as marketable. Living so close to VanSant, you could build "ground" time working on planes easily with the amount of planes that are being worked on around there... With an A&P in hand, you might be able to "backdoor" into flying crew slots with warbird bomber and transport groups and the offer of flying up front is a lot easier. Ask some of the folks on the Wings of Freedom Tour... they'll tell you that the sweat you put out pays off in the long run.
I agree with Chuck on the banner tow and glider tow route too... it's iron-butt work with little pay, but that precious tailwheel time...
I will be frank and say that the chances of getting a "paying job" flying warbirds is pretty much a dream though. It may be a benefit of being a corporate pilot or mechanic for a guy who owns a Citation AND a Mustang... if he ever trusts you to fly it, but again, that's slim. Most museums can barely keep a curator on a salary, much less pilots... that's why you PAY to flying sponsor planes in the CAF and the like.
Your best shot in any case is... do well, network, get a good paying job, move upward, and make the money it takes to own your own warbird. Most of the warbird pilots that fly other peoples planes are folks that own one themselves... Dan McCue owned an NA-50, Yak-11, and an L-39 before flying other peoples planes... and now he flies an F4U-5NL as much as if he owned it.
Good luck! Always be looking for opportunities... you never know what hangar might land you some luck!