I too went on a jag about the market value of our beloved airplanes. Then I had to ask myself where their value truly lay. If Triple Tails did not exist how much would I pay for what I feel when I fly mine? Would I have ever known that flying could be this good had I never known of these airplanes?
Now, how many of 'em are there? What are the odds that a pilot would know? Once we know, how much do we have to put up with to keep 'em? Okay, so now we're dealing with people shopping for an aircraft. They're going to come at this entire equation from the opposite direction: practicality first. We've established the slim likelihood that they know these airplanes. They see an ad for one. Never heard of it, and chances are that the photo in the ad - if there is a photo, of course - is the FIRST TIME THEY'VE EVER SEEN ONE. These are not aircraft of legend. They see a complex airplane - complex *and* high performance in some cases - that they don't know, have no reliable parts source for, has a wing made of wood, etc. etc. etc.
And you expect people to put up big dollars for these?
We, all of us, are accidents of fate. By simply knowing of them, and having flown them, or owned them, we have defied long, long odds. And, having known them, we put up with WAY more trouble to keep them flying than owners of most types. You, of all people, know that Lord Ford.
Is there a tougher sell in General Aviation? I think not.
So, again I ask: what's it worth to you? And do you really need the validation of lots of zeros after a number in an airplane ad to make you proud? Having met you, and read your posts over...hell...years, I think not, my friend
Jonathan