k5083 wrote:
Luckily someone managed to sneak 27 military aircraft into the downtown facility (a majority of the 48 aircraft on display) and 61 military aircraft into Udvar-Hazy when the people who run the NASM weren't looking.
August
Yes, they have plenty of warbirds downtown...but many/most are non-US. And the F-104 is in NASA markings.
For the American
National air museum the fact they don't have a B-17, B-24, B-47, B-36, B-58 or B-52 on display is odd.
As I said, lacking all of them smacks of PC-ism considering the role bombers played in WWII and the Cold War and they are genuine artifacts.
And don't forget the Enola Gay debacle.
As I've said, it's great they have a Do-335 or a Japanese sub launched airplane (both technical oddities that played no part in US history), but can't manage to find the space to display a B-17 is a crime. The sat on the
Swoose for 50+ years before letting her go to a home where she's being restored.
It would have been nice for the Smithsonian to have recognized B-17/b-24s while the generation that designed, built and flew them was still around.
I agree that a B-17 should have been downtown when the museum was first opened in the 1970's. I think space was/is a major consideration for the downtown museum and getting to be an issue at UH. I disagree on the NASM needing a B-36, B-47, B-58 or a B-52 (as much as I like them all) today. While I agree that the B-52 has earned induction to the the NASM, I think available floorspace dictates otherwise. I think it just fine that the military museums concentrate on bombers and the NASM concentrate on what they are good at- truly historic airframes, record setters, one-offs and representative aircraft from all sorts of roles from all kinds of countries (military, civil, space, etc). Placing a B36, B47, B58 and B52 downtown (not that they would even really fit) or at UH would would greatly reduce space for other airframes. I would rather see 6-8 sole survivors, even if obscure, than a B-52 at UH. Those Axis survivors are true jems. Size is an issue.