p51 wrote:
Spectre_I wrote:
Or...
Work your way on to the board of a museum, and change the policy?
Tough to do from
several hundred miles away. All the museums where I live allow all the photos you wanna take (and nobody's ever said anything about tripods at all). You know, little, unheard of places that never get many visitors. Like the museum of flight in Seattle...

We have volunteers that come from further. I know, it's easier to work from a keyboard. Maybe the Museum of Flight could use your expertise?
Must've missed the rest of my earlier post:-
Spectre_I wrote:
BTW, this policy only applies to the VC-9. Pictures can be taken anywhere else on our grounds with stabilization and flash if you so chose. In fact, we place our exhibits with photographers in mind. Planes are placed so that photos can be taken from 360 degrees around the plane, without having another plane in the photo.
I will further add the word "interior". You can take all the pictures of the
outside of the VC-9, and every last one of the over 60 aircraft we have on display, from any angle you wish, 360 degrees, with a tripod, bipod, monopod, flash, cell phone, polaroid, sketch book, crayon, whatever. And, btw, the VC-9 is accessible from the parking lot, where there is absolutely no admission, or parking fee, required. You can walk right up to the dang thing and touch it
FOR FREE!O.K., my frustration showing yet?
EDIT - Based on my little outburst, apparently so. My apologies.
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Castle Air Museum