From another thread:
Django wrote:
As much as WIXers go nutty for authenticity, I think that the general public could care less about the Spanish Air Force. You could argue that they SHOULD be educated about it, but in the end, it would take an owner committed to telling their story. Which would be tough when the Luftwaffe is so much more attractive.
Err, which 'general public' is that? I think the Spanish general public might have a different view. Let's paint 'em all as
Old Crow now.
Sure it is tough choosing the less famous version - but some of us reckon diversity has some merit. As has been said, it would be a very dull world if we all thought the same; what I find interesting is different people's approaches to different aviation history. Travelling the world is educating about 'there' and can be a bit of a shocker about 'there' when 'there' turns out to be where you are from.
Maybe a bit of Spanish Air Force history wouldn't go amiss in in the USA - after all, the US were happy to supply lots of aircraft to the last European Fascist dictator because he wasn't a 'Commie'. The Spanish had to 'invent' Buchons and Casa 2111s because no one else was selling them aircraft;
then the US did, getting Franco out of a hole. (That's not an American bashing exercise, just a bit of history we like to forget because it smells bad.)
Django wrote:
For me personally, I don't know that I could fly one in SAF colors anymore than I could bring myself to fly a Mustang in postwar livery. It's just not my focus.
Fair enough. Of course some of it is if you think of 'em as toys or bits of history. If all we do is focus on the heroes (and their 'cool airplanes') then it's a very poor effort of history.
Most of us recognise W.W.II history is a bit more than a B-17 and a Mustang. Part of the schemes and types question is ensuring that simplistic myth is challenged by, say, P-61s and Twin Mustangs, B-24s, P-40s and so forth.
Regards,