Worth mentioning two features which mean that the CAF works well in the USA but not elsewhere is the concept and management of a 'Chapter' system, and the US tax breaks for museum donations etc. Chapters don't have the same status outside the US, and most other countries don't have the structure to support the US' tax break system. For instance the UK has the government funded and RAF run Battle of Britain Memorial Flight - who celebrated their half-century last year (
http://www.bbmf.co.uk/history.html ). We still await the USAF Memorial Flight, which highlights the differences (not better or worse, just
different) between the US and elsewhere...
The irony of the egalitarian nature of everyone being Colonels (even starts with the same letter as 'Comrade') for similar reasons is rich, btw.
Well worth trying to get ahold of 'Colonel Colpepper's Flying Circus' for an independent insight into the CAF in its heyday. Don't ask me where you get one though!
The CAF are, unarguably, one of the most important groups in the warbird movement. As to the concept of
flying, preserved warbirds in private hands, they were well up in the list for the early days.