[color=#000000]Sounds like a bit of supply and demand economics and the like going on. Don't get me wrong, I love to see older aircraft restored into operation. But, if the demand is not great enough for the supply . . . well, then the monies won't be coming in.
Sadly I think the major downside to the project has been the timescale, and by that I'm not referring completely to the last 7 years of restoration
proper. The aircraft had a lot of public support when it did its final display as an RAF aircraft in 1992. Sadly the next 7 years was spent convincing the Civil Aviation Authority that a civvy organisation could operate the jet and that a large engineering company would take over design authority of the aircraft, as BAe/BAE Systems weren't particularly interested. Shorten the timescale and I suspect the project would have been far more successful financially.
On a side not, a lot of people seem to mention the "damage" this will do to other aircraft restorers applying for Heritage Lottery Fund money. One can counter this by pointing out that one of the main sticking points was getting HLF to actually fund an
operational restoration, rather than a museum exhibit. In this aspect, no damage could have been done at all, as TVOC were the one's who got the ruled changed anyway!