Daily Mail

My other ride is a jet fighter

- Compiled by Charles Legge

QUESTION If you had enough money, could you buy a disarmed military jet fighter and use it as a private jet to tour the world? WHILE the U.S. bans sales of nearly all its fighter jets — even ones that are more than 50 years old — to civilians, other nations have a more relaxed approach.

Most military jet fighters out of service for over a decade or so come up for sale and can be bought legally, so several airworthy British Tornados and Harriers and French Mirages are on the market.

While all armaments have been removed, interestin­g military technology is left installed more often than you might think. For example, a Tornado F2 for sale (price undisclose­d) has a prototype holographi­c Head-Up Display (HUD).

Russian MiGs are a popular choice for civilian pilots due to their availabili­ty and ease of sourcing spare parts. Technology magnates Paul Allen, of Microsoft, and Larry Ellison, of Oracle Corp, have owned and flown MiGs.

MiG-21 variants are regularly for sale from £50,000 upwards. Expect to spend £3 million or more for a MiG-29.

Running costs are £3,000 an hour for fuel, and you should budget for maintenanc­e costs of £10,000 a year.

The maximum range of most fighter jets is around 1,000 miles. That means at least 23 fuel stops if you were flying around the world at the Equator (not to mention the problem of mid-ocean refuelling).

Some airports will not accept former fighter aircraft, and there can be restrictio­ns on flying over populated areas. And flying within a few hundred miles of a war zone is to be avoided.

David Haigh Jr., London. QUESTION

In cricket, I often see players throw the ball into the air instantly after making a catch. How long does the ball have to be held for it to be deemed a catch?

THERE is no time limit, and the taking of a catch is at the discretion of the umpire or, where the decision is uncertain, the third umpire.

From the official discussion of Law 33 (Caught): ‘ The act of making a catch shall start from the time when the ball first comes into contact with a fielder’s person and shall end when a fielder obtains complete control over both the ball and his/her own movement.’

This code was introduced in 2000. It was a change from the 1980 code, where the law stated: ‘ The act of making the catch shall start from the time when the fieldsman first handles the ball and shall end when he both retains complete control over the further disposal of the ball and remains within the field of play.’

This latter ruling was particular­ly relevant in an incident during the 1999 World Cup between South Africa and Australia.

Steve Waugh was batting on 56 when he hit a loose shot straight to Herschelle Gibbs at mid-wicket, who took the catch and attempted to throw the ball in the air in celebratio­n, but lost control of it. Under the 1980 ruling, it was called a drop.

Waugh is supposed to have said to him: ‘How does it feel to drop the World Cup?’ Gibbs had scored 101 in that game, but that was overshadow­ed by Waugh’s match-winning innings of 120.

The result of this match came back to haunt South Africa when their semi-final ended in a tie and Australia qualified for the final. Under the 2000 rule, Gibbs might have been awarded the catch.

In a similar episode in 2016, Joe Root was caught and bowled by Umesh Yadav for 124. The Indian seamer grabbed the ball at thigh height before tossing the ball in the air in such a manner to raise doubt as to whether he had control of the ball. Under the 2000 law, he was awarded the catch; under the 1980 rule, he might not have been. J. Patel, Redditch, Worcs. QUESTION

Shakespear­e set many plays in foreign countries. Is there evidence that he travelled abroad?

SHAkESPEAR­E is not known to have travelled outside England — no records exist of his travelling abroad, no companion ever mentioned travelling with him and no foreigner is recorded as ever having noticed him.

Despite this, more than three-quarters of Shakespear­e’s plays are set outside the country, from Denmark to Libya and Spain to Syria. It has been assumed he did this so as not to offend the monarch.

At that time, such sedition could have dire consequenc­es, and what better way to criticise the elite than by setting the action in a foreign country or the distant past?

Glaring errors in his works suggest Shakespear­e never visited the settings.

Fellow playwright Ben Jonson ridiculed the presence in The Winter’s Tale of a coast and desert in Bohemia, since the kingdom (which correspond­s to the modern-day Czech Republic) had neither.

In his first play, The Two Gentlemen Of Verona, the heroes make a sea voyage from Verona to Milan, both of which are inland.

Shakespear­e also makes a topographi­cal error in Hamlet when he describes Elsinore’s cliffs.

The name of the city, called Helsingor in Danish, is derived from the word hals meaning ‘neck’ or ‘narrow strait’. And it doesn’t have any cliffs.

All this is, of course, churlish. As Charlton Ogburn writes in The Mysterious William Shakespear­e: The Myth And The Reality: ‘Those who make an issue of such discrepanc­ies seem unaware that in Shakespear­e’s day accuracy in details like these was still a fetish of the future.’ Peter Smith, Durham.

IS THERE a question to which you have always wanted to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question raised here? Send your questions and answers to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London, W8 5TT; fax them to 01952 780111 or email them to charles.legge@dailymail.co.uk. A selection will be published but we are not able to enter into individual correspond­ence.

 ??  ?? High flier: Tycoon Larry Ellison (right) owns a MiG-29 jet fighter (above)
High flier: Tycoon Larry Ellison (right) owns a MiG-29 jet fighter (above)
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