51fixer wrote:
If it goes to Britain the CAA will not issue a permit to fly unless the structure can be assessed to be in as strong a condition as the original and will be able to maintain that level of strength for a significant period of time. Look at the recent developments of the other British aircraft being grounded. The UK version of the FAA is significantly more intrusive and demanding than here in the US. Over there it is not a situation where an A&P signs off an aircraft as airworthy, the CAA says prove it with engineering and paperwork. A CAA authorized pilot must make the test flights on a new restoration to prove it meets the specs, the CAA must approve of all documents and engineering before issuing the Permit to Fly.
I would venture a guess if this aircraft is restored to flight a new airframe would be built like the one currently being done for Fighter Factory.
Bruce is best qualified to clarify this, but from his comments on other forums, I got the impresion that for the UK, the BAe/CAA situation would mean the opposite being true? It's a 'new build' Mossie that would not get BAe/CAA approval, and for any chance of a Mossie flying in the UK it would have to be an original with traceable history, which makes this one very attractive....????
I have to say, I can't see what all the fuss is about, yes it's been looked after in so much as it's been stored OK, but nothing has been done with it for so many years, and isn't likely to be, so either they should donate it to another Canadian musuem that WILL restore and display it as a priority....or sell it to someone that will.
The worst thing is do nothing with it and then moan about anything positive happening with it.
I base my comments on discussions with some folks at Duxford. Basically, Princess had a lot of new build parts in her and she passed the CAA routine. Multiple Spitfires have been built from all new parts. This all meets with CAA approval. Maybe it would have to be done at a CAA approved facility. The other thing is I also said probably. Figuring out if the structure is sound and the glue hasn't deteriorated would be my biggest concern. Even if stored indoors. I did a pre-buy on an FG-1 that flew very little over a 25 year span and was stored indoors pretty much in that time. On the ailerons The wood had shrunk, glue had deteriorated, you could poke the tip of a pencil through the wood in places and many glue joints had separated. Not to say this is what is there but it deserves careful attention.