Cvairwerks wrote:
A thought here from a slightly different perspective..... The jets flying today are going to be the antique warbirds of the current generation. When the war was over, there was a huge rush to delete anything that reminded people of the war and it's cost. If it weren't for a bunch of visionaries that had the desire and the money and the space, virtually everything from that period and on would have been lost. It's happening again with the remanents from the Cold War/Vietnam/Desert Shield era, as you see the military disposing of millions of things and forcing the absolute destruction of them, wether they have any civilian use or desire for the preservation of them.
I totally agree with you Cvairwerks, and I think that will definitely happen. However there are three MAJOR factors which tend to inhibit anyone from preserving jets. They are:
1) The U.S. millitary in particular, is extremely reluctant to release any kind of either supersonic or tactical jet from it's ranks after retirement. They won't even release T-38's, undemilled, which carry no weapons or bombs. Because of this, it is VERY hard to get surplus aircraft with a clear title that is not on loan from the Air Force Museum.
2) Jets are much more complex and require very specialized training to operate and maintain. Because of this, they are extremely expensive to fly. They are much more so in ratio to what an average person makes, compared to what the average person made following W.W.II, who could go out and buy a P-51 for $ 200. This tends to weed out a lot of people because of the huge commitment it takes.
3) Jets are money pits which do nothing but convert $100 bills out the back end into hydrocarbons. With an energy crisis looming, and the price of AV gas, or Jet A hugely expensive, it takes a millionaire to even attempt to think about maintaing any kind of surplus U.S. jet.
These factors, alone, will tend to dampen many people's enthusiasm to preserve the current jets, which are tomorrow's warbirds. Yes, there will be an occassional static jet here and there, but there won't be the huge numbers of surplus military aircraft out flying in the civilian sector like what happened after W.W. II.