Ryan Harris wrote:
bdk wrote:
wendovertom wrote:
Generally speaking, its sad that there are no flying Panthers or Cougars. I mean they are roughly the same era as a T-33, but must be harder to maintain or restore.
There have been, even two-seaters. Not sure if the problem is parts or something about the way they fly.
To my knowledge there have only been 2 Panthers and 1 F9F-8 to fly in the warbird world. 1 Panther had a successful warbird career for awhile before it was wrecked on take-off and restored to static at Kalamazoo, while the 2nd was originally flown by Harry Doan before being re-restored by Cavanaugh and then eventually parked. The Cougar flew very briefly in the early 90's before it disappeared without a trace on a flight between Houston and Florida.
The Panther that was wrecked on take-off was owned by Art Wolk of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and often hangared at the Air Zoo in Kalamazoo. It was a regular participant in airshows I went to as a youngster. I always loved seeing it fly. The F9F was wrecked in 1996 if I remember correctly. It was then sold at an auction by the Air Zoo in 2005.
The most recent photo I could find of it was in this write-up of the 2017 airshow at Quonset Point:
https://photorecon.net/quonset-point-ri ... -lot-more/As mentioned in that article, it was then associated with the JFK Carrier Foundation, but the plans for that museum obviously fell through. I did a lot of internet digging on this a while back and found that the Panther was at one time destined for the New England branch of a Ted Williams museum, but I could never find any mention of where it might be displayed or where it is now. The Panther was also once associated with the Rhode Island Aviation Hall of Fame and may actually still be with that group. I'm assuming the aircraft is probably in storage somewhere in New England, maybe around Quonset Point.