Jerry O'Neill wrote:
There was a plan in the late 70's that involved Anson Johnson and the racer being restored and flown for a few years at Reno and an attempt to break the propeller speed record with it. Thankfully, wiser heads prevailed and the aircraft is, at least, still with us.
I remember hearing about that back in the early '80's and thinking it would have been kind of neat to see Anson Johnson out there turning the pylons again. That airplane, in it's modified form, never really had much of a shot in '49 (started burning off the custom built exhaust stacks early in the race and had to pull out)...and I recall that Johnson made some claims of speeds in excess of 500 mph in Florida in the early 50's 'in prep' for a shot at the 3 km record.
While I understand from the Museum standpoint that it is 'at least still with' you guys, I'm more apt to enjoy it the same way Ben McKillen's F2G was raced for a new generation, and how every time Lefty ran his P-38 those of us in the know were watching J.D. Reed's "Sky Ranger" race again. (Obviously this brings up the Leeward "Galloping Ghost" airframe being readied to race again...and while it may not be the exact 'airframe', at least the data plate and spirit live on in that one.) I'd love to see the Cleveland Museum do the same with Bob Swanson's Mustang. Hopefully in a year or two we'll see the Cleland/Becker F2G turning the pylons again.
The argument could be made that it's safer to have the plane sitting in a museum than to have a (then) 65+ year old 'former owner' chasing down the ghosts of his past....but then again, who would have guessed a tornado would ever touch down in Connecticut?