RMAllnutt wrote:
The only significant damage to NASM airframes occurred when they were forced to be stored outside, (ironically, this was due to them having lost their hangarage due to Air Force requirements).
I've been a big supporter of NASM over the years, and still am of the museum (but not the current leadership, which I believe is too focused on building out revenue streams rather than focusing on the educational nature of their mission).
However, Swoose was damaged while indoors. As the docent who took me on one of the several Saturday tours of Garber that I went on in the 6 or 7 years before it closed to the public, they were moving some crates around on a forklift and one or more fell out, dishing in the port-side forward fuselage. This damage is readily apparent in the recent pictures take of her while in storage there.
Flak Bait continues to be damaged on a daily basis due to how they have her on display. With the possible exception of the P-80 and Me-262 (which are "touchable" by people with long arms who can stretch out a ways), I believe that Flak Bait is the only artifact on display at either of their museums (besides those intended to be touched, like the moon rock) that can be touched by the public. And she is touched, scratched, etc, with the damage to her original paint apparent and worsening. At one point during a previous discussion on the matter here I almost made a joke (and really, it was going to be meant as a joke, since I would NEVER actually do anything like this) that if anyone wanted to send me a $20 bill and a self-addressed, self-stamped envelope I'd be happy to send back paint chips from her.
What's really amusing (in a sad way) about Flak Bait is that NASM has been putting up protective plexiglas along the 2nd-floor balcony/walkway at Mall since the JN-4D in the "America by Air" exhibit was damaged by stupid kids dropping coins onto her from above. She's since been relocated to Dulles, where she sits at the Southern end of the main hangar disassembled. So at the moment the plexiglas is still in place to protect an artifact that is no longer there. I see absolutely no reason why Flak Bait couldn't be put completely behind plexiglas as well until she can be moved out to Dulles for restoration and reassembly.
Finally, in fairness, so far as I know every artifact that NASM has in its actual possession, with the exception of the C-130 out at Dulles, is indoors and protected from the elements and with the exception of the C-121 (which sat next to the C-130 until it was restored and moved into the Dulles museum recently) has been since "the Barn" (where Enterprise, the B-17 now in Savannah, the B-25, Sageburner, and a good number of other artifacts) and "Quonset Hut" (built specifically to house the SR-71A) were built out at Dulles 20-30 years ago. NMUSAF, OTOH, still had a dozen or so artifacts (including the C-141 Hanoi Taxi and the Migetman missile transporter) sitting outdoors at Dayton.