How safe are those WW2 planes really?

I got the opp to fly in a tiger Moth in Australia a few years ago. First youtube I found for the airfield resulted in this


Still did it, and it was an amazing experience! :)
 
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There is also the option to ride in the nose gunner seat of a flying fortress :D, or fly in a F7F Tigercat (most expensive).
 
Don't forget to turn up the volume....



What a wonderful sound! :D

These belong to a local collector, unsuspectingly nestled in the Norfolk wilderness. Utterly fantastic things & I'd sell various body parts to have a flight. Regular customer at work so get to see them often & popped down to their open day a week or so back. Do it Kwerk, it's easily worth the small risk.


P-51D 2Janie" by Pete19s, on Flickr

P-51D "Marinell" by Pete19s, on Flickr

P-51D "Marinell" by Pete19s, on Flickr
 
Would you ride as a passenger in a P-51? Flown by an amateur owner? I have the opportunity to fly in one (for $1600) and i'm really tempted but looking on google and youtube they seem to crash a lot.
Please take this opportunity with both hands.
 
They're generally better looked after than commercial aircraft. Many are completely mollycoddled.

I'd bite peoples hands off to have a go in one of Maurice's Mustangs.
 
Not a P-38 mate, I'm sure I read somewhere that there was a very long range escort version which had twin airframe and cockpits. It was basically two Mustangs side by side with a twin boom. I'm not sure if it made operational service but I'm sure it was built.
 
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