A couple of years back I was talking to the engineer at the gliding club. During our conversation he took a phone call during which he said something along the lines of "Look, I should be getting rid of this spitfire later today, then we can get it into the hangar and have a look, OK?"
Naturally, I quizzed him over this and he took me into the hangar where, it turns out, MH434 had spent the night.
http://www.mh434.com/ 
So, I got a personal tour and a look in the cockpit. What's more, they needed some help getting her out and ready for flight.. did I have a few minutes to spare? Ermm. Let me think about that.

Very nearly didn't have the clearance to get her out of the hangar! Had to turn the prop and then shuffle left and right, turn the prop a bit more, etc. until it went through with an inch or two spare. Suspension had apparently relaxed a bit overnight!
Had a chat with the pilot while he was getting ready. If memory serves, it had a 100 gallon fuel tank in each wing in lieu of the guns, and 85 gallons in the fuselage. Good enough for about 3.5 hours flying with a decent reserve, based on a bit of cruising with a few displays thrown in, apparently. "..and that's about as long as you'd want to be there anyway" Not likely, they'd have to prise me from the cockpit, I reckon... In my dreams.

About 9 MPG in an "economical" cruise, apparently. Don't ever say the 3.2 is thirsty!
Got a brief impromptu display as he departed and again on his return.
