As a member who mostly reads and seldom replies to the threads on this forum, I have seen (and no doubt will see) this debate arise countless times. My $.02,
which is about exactly how much it's worth, is that no surviving airframe is "dead." It is all too easy for us with little experience but starry eyes to make the argument that everything should fly or even that all static aircraft should be indoors. Until we have been in the shoes of those making these decisions or paying the operating, maintenance, and/or other costs, it is a moot point. I think the big issue in the case of Yanks and other, similar outfits is that they have a collection of rare aircraft which have been painstakingly restored to "airworthy" standards,
but are not flown. Any time the effort is made to make an aircraft operational (even if just for a ferry flight), it always seems much more significant to me when said aircraft is parked or preserved in a static museum...just because the imagination cannot help but picture the plane in flight, particularly if it last flew in your lifetime. A few good examples include the B-29 restored for ferry to the IWM in England in 1980 video here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPgz3P8q1VM Or the lengthy restoration of a C-124 so it could be flown to its final resting place:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2K44L3KmoBU (watch closely in the beginning of the video for all the B-29s!) And finally, there's the B-47 on display at Castle Air Museum. According to the museum's own website, the plane was restored to the tune of
36,000 man hours so that it could make the final flight of a B-47 in 1986. Unfortunately, I could not find video of this one...
http://www.castleairmuseum.org/boeing_b47e.html None of these aircraft are "dead," per say, and we are fortunate that they have been preserved, but at the same time, none of them were ever de-milled, gutted, or vandalized, and it
seems more a shame to see them parked knowing that they went from dormant to briefly operational and back to dormant. Again, just my $.02...
Matt