by waaytoomuchintothis » Sat Oct 24, 2015 12:17 pm
I know it seems impossible, but when we took the P-51 to Oshkosh, I was so busy I never even got close to having enough time to see that wonderful museum. I don't regret a second of what I did there, but I sure wish I could have seen it in the time allotted on that trip. The owner of the plane flew it to Oshkosh, but I drove the Suburban full of tools and parts. I wasn't that far behind him when I got there because he stopped for fuel several times.
I traded an old main gear brakes set for a new brake set for a P-61 (a bolt-on swap and much better brakes). That was possible only because the "Fly Market" at Oshkosh attracts such a huge gathering of warbird parts. That was more or less my role with the plane. I found things and fixed things. Being a research mole, I found out all kinds of things that made life easier with a 60 year old airplane. We had the full set of US Army Air Corps manuals for the P-51D which took up a shelf that ran the length of the hanger wall. We had a spare Merlin, and only had to service the Hamilton Standard prop one time (thank god- what a chore!). We got our hands on an old Navy towmotor with the bridle for tail draggers, and we kept scaffolding for me to service the engine, and an overhead traveller crane for tasks like lifting the tail, and that awful 20 hour stretch servicing the prop. It was a first class operation all the way, with an AT-6, the P-51, and the Piper Cherokee that was used like a flying Suburban to fetch parts. I was the weak link, being not only an amateur whose work had to be checked by pros, but also the poorest guy in the hanger. I was doing a Master's at the time, living in married student housing with a wife and two kids. I can't believe I once had that kind of energy.
Shortly after I graduated and moved away, they got a Corsair, which can be a death trap for those who think they have mastered flying it (just like the old Beech Staggerwing). Its a windmill with a giant radial engine, and somewhere behind all that there's an airplane. I was relieved they didn't get it while I was there. Besides being insanely fast and maneuverable, it is complicated beyond belief. So much advanced beyond planes I know about, I'd have to study for months to do anything.