Tomahawk wrote:
In U.S. service, this a/c never made any significant contribution to the war effort. It still goes back to the numbers. The Brewster F2A Buffalo was, is, and ever shall be, irrelevant.
(Unless you're a Finnish citizen. I think they have at least one in a museum, if you need to touch one.)
I think the families of the VMF-221 pilots who lost their lives at Midway would beg to differ.
Is there any airframe out there, civilian or military, that would be considered truly irrelevant? Heck, I even think Cessna 172s are relevant.
There's always going to be someone out there who will restore something, even though conventional wisdom says it would not be a good way to spend one's money. All one has to do is look at the vintage car world. There are examples of pristine examples of vehicles that nobody else would think of saving or restoring. Saving the oddballs that no one thinks about is what makes the vintage car world interesting. The same could be said for our little world. Building an F2A or TBD replica is certainly within the realm of the abilities of several of the restoration shops in this country. It all comes down to dollars and desire. I sincerely believe that we will see a flying TBD replica within the next 20 years.