phil65 wrote:
I like it...
I personally think nothing of any importance should be restored, it should be preserved. As they say, it's only original once.
Phil
But that can be taken to ludicrous extremes.
Without restorations (or taking your point too far) there would be no flying warbirds.
Take a warbird out of its element you might as well have a oil painting on display...since they show the aircraft in its element far more than a preserved, dusty, stuffed, bird hanging from the ceiling or behind ropes.
What best represents a type and its crews place in history better...the stripped Loch Ness Wellington at the Brooklands museum or the retrieved from a lake Halifax at Hendon or the shiny new paint, frequently overhauled BBMF airworthy Lancaster?As I have previously mentioned, I write for a collector car mahazine, so I have heard all the arguments and read the good, the bad, and the stupid arguments on the subject.
Taking it too far is the individual of questionable judgement who announced he wasn't going to polish the brass radiator of his brass-era Buick (hardly a rare, valuable or historic car...it's no Silver Ghost prototype), because he didn't want to disturb its patina.
Also, a friend had an all-original custom bodied (as they all were) Rolls Royce Phantom II towncar, (originally owned by a famous UK personage). Its trim paint has checked ever the years but still presented well. I asked if he was going to restore it (this was 20 years ago before the 'don't restore' movement took hold), and he correctly said no.
But I would make the point that there is a difference between preserving hand applied finish on a custom-bodied car and a mass market item.
Okay, a Hemi-'cuda is worth a lot today, but when it was built, it was just another $3500 Plymouth, cranked out of a factory at a fast pace by often disinterested members of the UAW.
Yes, it's original paint has some significance, but if it looked really bad, I'd replace it in a heartbeat on my (now) valuable muscle car.
So there is no universal answer.
The "only original once" cliche is not universal.