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These days, there is a growing market for "discovery flights" in warbirds. They started with stock, military-surplus, 2-seater trainers (e.g. Harvard) but have branched out to include Me.109, Spitfire and Hurricane. A few British operations even offer formation flights - for extra passengers - in vintage deHavilland passenger planes (Heron or Dragon Rapide). Some one has to help pay the massive restoration and maintenance costs for those rare antiques.
Back when I worked in the pilot emergency parachute business (Butler, Para-Phernalia and Rigging Innovations) I packed a bewildering array of PEPs for World War 2 vintage warbirds. Many single-seater fighters had been converted to carry an extra person in a jump-seat. Some of those jump-seats were crude one-offs that crammed the extra person into tight spaces recently vacated by radio, armor, fuel tanks, etc. OTOH some were converted proffessionaly and are exact copies of the rare USAF TF-51D Mustang two-seater trainers.
I am most interested in airplanes that only left the factory as single-seaters, but were later converted for civilian owners: Corsair, Hawker Hurricane, Hawker Sea Fury, Messerschmitt Br.109, NAA P-51D Mustang, Supermarine Spitfire, Yak fighters, etc.
Photos or drawings would be helpful.
How many have a complete second set of instruments and controls?
How many have partial controls or partial instrument panels?
How many only add seat(s)?
Speaking of seats ... the record seems to be the 3-seat wide sofa that and Argentinian installed in the aft fuselage of his Grumman Wildcat.
How many extra seats did Bob Diemart install in his Fairey Firefly restoration?
Yes, most of these conversions were done after WW2, but the key point is that the airplanes were originally made before 1946.
Back when I worked in the pilot emergency parachute business (Butler, Para-Phernalia and Rigging Innovations) I packed a bewildering array of PEPs for World War 2 vintage warbirds. Many single-seater fighters had been converted to carry an extra person in a jump-seat. Some of those jump-seats were crude one-offs that crammed the extra person into tight spaces recently vacated by radio, armor, fuel tanks, etc. OTOH some were converted proffessionaly and are exact copies of the rare USAF TF-51D Mustang two-seater trainers.
I am most interested in airplanes that only left the factory as single-seaters, but were later converted for civilian owners: Corsair, Hawker Hurricane, Hawker Sea Fury, Messerschmitt Br.109, NAA P-51D Mustang, Supermarine Spitfire, Yak fighters, etc.
Photos or drawings would be helpful.
How many have a complete second set of instruments and controls?
How many have partial controls or partial instrument panels?
How many only add seat(s)?
Speaking of seats ... the record seems to be the 3-seat wide sofa that and Argentinian installed in the aft fuselage of his Grumman Wildcat.
How many extra seats did Bob Diemart install in his Fairey Firefly restoration?
Yes, most of these conversions were done after WW2, but the key point is that the airplanes were originally made before 1946.
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