jack973 wrote:
wildchild you have said wise words.
1st: this museum is in a country that lack the enough money for even medicine for their hospital. look in newspapers websites to see that this country lives in real crisis. this probably means that they may not have enough for museums or other cultural institutions, so the have to work on their own to gather money, i think just visitor.
2nd:legally all museums must have a document that says they are the only allowed to protect and restore the airplane. this one i think has it, so they are the legal "owners of the plane.
3rd: manteinance now a days is very expensive. the corsair of colling foundation costed around $ 1 million dollars!! some others probably more. that´s money!! have you ever thought that if you think your car is expensive to maintain, how hard is to maintain a plane in this country??? go around spare stores and you will see hoe much they cost.
4th: this one is not the only plane outside in the world!!! there are many others!!! why he bothers with that??? i can get many other pictures of them!!! and good challenge you gave him, he wants other to do a job he can´t do, he wants them to work for money to do a restoration and he has given a penny for it!!!
believe me, i can track this tread back one year and hasn´t given any help, nothing. pure bla, bla, bla, bla. they need ca$$$$$$$$h!!!!!
It is interesting that someone who expresses a desire to improve the condition of an aircraft is treated in a hostile way.
Lets examine a few things here.
An Aircraft sitting on dirt or grass will be attacked by corrosion and degrade its metals far quicker than one on concrete or asphalt. The further one is from organic matter such as grass, weeds, pollen and other organic materials that float in the wind the better it is for the aircraft.
Put it inside a building where moisture and organic material are kept away from it and it will last much longer without suffering metal corrosion.
Sunlight will degrade the fabric material on the flight control surfaces and the plastic of the canopy. The longer it sits outside in the sun the greater the degradation.
These are all facts.
Can an improvement be made at all in it's display?
It would not take millions to move it or to build a concrete pad to display or to even build a building for it.
Many museums across the world have faced these issues with their artifacts.
Instead of casting stones perhaps funding should be sought to improve the display of all these aircraft. I'm sure there is some way of doing something.
Don't complain about those complaining, do things to help the display of the aircraft.