Bill Greenwood wrote:
A number of people have asked on WIX about my Spitfire.
I did put something on a week or two back on the Maintenance topic, but here is a bit of an update.
I have not done a full report like Gary did with the LB, oops, B-24. Much of that is because the sight of the plane as damaged is very tough for me to look at. I have only been to Ray's shop once since it was returned to Colorado. There is quite a bit of damage to the left wing, some to the right, two broken prop blades, gear mount, flaps, etc. It is especially hard to look at since just before the accident it was in really nice shape,. we had even washed it and really cleaned it up for the show. It was running and flying well, no major problems. The fuselage looks pretty much the same, but without the wings.
Tim may have taken photos as they go, but I really haven't asked them to. They have plenty to do.
Work began on it full time about June. I am sure they have done a lot, I get big bills each month, last one was $13,625. I hope we are near the stage where they are reassembling the wings. I asked Tim if they could finish the right one first, but they prefer all the wing work as one together and that makes sense.
I don't have a timetable, any such claim or projection would be a guess. I recall years ago some guys were restoring a MK V. They were computer experts and had a impressive plan and timetable. But it had no contact with reality, and the plane was finished years later by others.
I have said many prayers of thanks that no one was injured, and I am also glad that there are folks like QG who can fix it. I hope to fly it again in a few years.
And thanks to all your good wishes on site or by PM. It's always good to hear something nice, even if I know it is mostly about the airplane. As for those who don't like me,don't really believe in free speech, and wanted me censored, I am surprised they haven't made their complaints public. I'd guess they've done their griping about me in private to Scott,etc. There is little respect lost between JDK and me, don't think that will ever change, but at least he made the effort to introduce himself at Oshkosh and no harm done by that.
Gary's loss has made me think a lot. I don't have the right words, but I have some sense that those of us in aviation, in warbirds, are perhaps part of something larger. I never was close to the spot on WIX that Gary filled, and nobody else was either, but I did share some of this feeling with some, maybe most of you. I still think there are many larger issues out there and sweeping them under the rug is not a position of integrity, it is not being a good citizen. I think it was perhaps JFK or RFK, that it was written on his tombstone, "He saw wrong and tried to right it." I don't think I'll have any big thing written on mine, unless my kids put "He saw chocolate chip cookies and tried to eat them all", but If all I had on mine was that "He was not unruly", then I would not have amounted to much. And yes, I looked up the definition of 'unruly". It means undisciplined, not subject to government control. I have certainly tried to have discipline in my flying. As for control, I think most people work better when convinced than just controlled by an government.
Bill, I like your rugged individualist sensibility, y'all are a Texan through and through now aincha son? If I didn't know any better, I'd guess you have a scoped Weatherby .300 Magnum rifle on a rack in your Ford F-150...or is it a Volvo wagon...either way... I think most of America's founding fathers were pretty unruly. Read some of Jefferson's quotes and it'd be easy to imagine him today being labeled by today's pols from both sides of the aisle as an extremist, intolerant, inflammatory, seething anti-gov't nut with crazy Federalist delusions. My kinda guy. As a retired Air Force officer, serving under guys like him would've given me peace of mind. Thanks for the report and I hope to see you flying the Spit soon even it looks like someone stole the Pope's mitre headgear, filleted it and stuck each half on either side of the fuselage.
