From an article by John Ross (original can be found at
http://www.john-ross.net/pdfs/maghist.pdf )
My friend Delmar Benjamin is an air show pilot who is best known for his performances in the 1930s Gee Bee racer replica that was built by Steve Wolf and is now in Kermit Weeks’ Fantasy of Flight museum in Florida. Delmar has often and for many years said that for an air show airplane, there is no such thing as too much power. Air show pilot Jimmy Franklin (who was killed in a midair collision in Canada in June 2005) had always agreed with Delmar’s assessment.
Then, around 1998 or 1999, Jimmy mounted a military surplus jet engine with 3000 pounds of thrust between the landing gear legs of his 1937 Waco open cockpit biplane, which already had a 450 HP Pratt & Whitney Wasp Junior radial mounted on the firewall, producing over 1600 pounds of prop thrust.
After performing several test flights to make sure the biplane flew well with a jet engine mounted underneath the fuselage and that everything was working okay, Jimmy lit up both engines, gave the radial full throttle, and did a normal takeoff. He then pulled the airplane vertical and gave the jet engine full throttle as well.
With over 4600 pounds of combined thrust and an all-up flying weight of around 3000 pounds, the 60-year-old biplane had the highest thrust-to-weight ratio of any aircraft on the civilian registry, and it soon accelerated to its never-exceed design speed while going straight up. After easing off the throttles, leveling off, descending, and landing the aircraft, Jimmy got out of his plane, went to a phone, dialed the number of his old friend, and uttered three words:
“Delmar, we’re close.”
As far as having sufficient bass response goes, "I'm close."