Man flies $100,000 abandoned airplane after years of restoration and it's a nerve-wracking moment
Published on Feb 22, 2026 at 4:29 PM (UTC+4)
by Molly Davidson
Last updated on Feb 19, 2026 at 9:50 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Emma Matthews
Restoring an abandoned airplane sounds romantic until you remember it has to fly.
That’s when the nerves really start.
After more than $100,000 and a year of work, one abandoned 1946 aircraft was finally ready to leave the ground again.
And the first takeoff in nearly nine years had everyone holding their breath.
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Restoring an abandoned airplane
The plane in question is a 1946 taildragger nicknamed Penelope, brought back to life by YouTuber Jimmy of Jimmys World after years sitting idle.
It hadn’t flown since early 2017, which in aviation terms is basically hibernation.
Over the past year, Jimmy and his team poured six figures into rebuilding it properly.
We’re talking new components, refreshed systems, and endless checks.

This wasn’t a cosmetic glow-up – it was what Jimmy called an ‘insane amount of maintenance’ to make the aircraft airworthy again.
Still, the morning of the test flight didn’t exactly inspire confidence.
First, the battery was barely alive, reading around nine volts.
Then, during pre-flight checks, Jimmy spotted oil where oil shouldn’t be.
Worse, the engine initially refused to build oil pressure after sitting for months.


That meant pulling fittings and manually priming the system just to get things moving.
It eventually worked, but not before raising a few heart rates.
And because this was the first flight after major work, Jimmy made a smart call.
He didn’t fly it himself.
Instead, he brought in an experienced pilot to handle the maiden return to the sky.

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The nerve-wracking hour in the air
The plan was straightforward: one hour at roughly 75 percent power, staying within a few thousand feet of the airport so they could glide back if anything went wrong.
When the craft lined up on the runway for the first time in nearly a decade, the mood shifted.
There’s something about an old airplane accelerating toward takeoff speed that makes every tiny sound feel significant.
Then it lifted.

For the next hour, the team watched from the ground as the aircraft circled the airport.
Engine temperatures were monitored closely, oil pressure was scrutinized, and every radio call mattered.
When the plane finally touched back down, a collective sigh of relief.
The pilot described it as flying ‘fantastic’ with temperatures and pressures mostly where they should be.


After nine silent years, the old 1946 machine flew like it wanted to.
It wasn’t perfect – they later suspected a couple of loose screws during rollout – but it worked.
After $100,000 and a year of work, the abandoned airplane flew again, and that first takeoff was every bit as nerve-wracking as you’d expect.
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With roles at TEXT Journal, Bowen Street Press, Onya Magazine, and Swine Magazine on her CV, Molly joined Supercar Blondie in June 2025 as a Junior Content Writer. Having experience across copyediting, proofreading, reference checking, and production, she brings accuracy, clarity, and audience focus to her stories spanning automotive, tech, and lifestyle news.