June 2023
Mark, just some small points of clarification from a local resident: the county name is Ravalli and there WAS a post crash fire in the engine compartment which consumed a portion of the cockpit (videos online through various news feeds). Paul also has a beautiful P-51 (Sierra Sue II) and has had other vintage aircraft over the years. A great loss to the Bitterroot Valley aviation community.
1 reply
June 2023
The WWII supply of parts is pretty much exhausted. We may be near a point in time where flying these museum pieces is no longer practical or generally safe.
June 2023
With 3d printers and cnc lathes, the parts made today can be, and in many cases are, better than the originals.
That said, anything can break at anytime. Even new parts break or fail. This is especially true with automotive parts.
2 replies
June 2023
▶ Starstreams58
Thank you, Marc. I updated the story. Very sorry for the loss to your community.
June 2023
▶ Karrpilot
And it’s probably a helluva lot cheaper to 3d print a part vs casting/machining one. That technology may help keep a lot of old aircraft flying.
July 2023
I watched a program a while back about the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome. One segment was an interview with the person responsible for maintaining the WWI vintage aircraft. The interviewer asked how the team deals with lack of parts. Specifically, he was asked if they used modern materials to replace original parts when they break. He said they try to stick as closely as possible to the original materials and processes. His reasoning was the original design was proven, and changing materials on a given part might transfer structural stress(es) that part was meant to bear to another that wasn’t.
July 2023
I was doing touch and go’s at Hamilton/Ravalli a week before this happened and was able to see this beautiful plane doing the same. It is truely a loss for the community.