This is the place where the majority of the warbird (aircraft that have survived military service) discussions will take place. Specialized forums may be added in the new future
Sun Sep 27, 2020 3:32 pm
hurricane_yank wrote:...where is the CASA 2111?
It's in the background of the shot of the AQM-34Q Firebee.
Sun Sep 27, 2020 9:43 pm
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bdk wrote:Don’t see two Invaders at Robins AFB. Have they moved the old one somewhere else?
Bdk- one of the Robins A-26s was moved to Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard Base in June 2020
Link to article:
https://www.robins.af.mil/News/Article- ... er-robins/
Mon Sep 28, 2020 8:12 am
Chris Brame wrote:hurricane_yank wrote:...where is the CASA 2111?
It's in the background of the shot of the AQM-34Q Firebee.
You are right - I just missed it.
Mon Sep 28, 2020 10:34 am
Thank you Vagabond. I travel on business to that area annually and usually go to the Robins museum. It is free, and worth going to even for 1/2 an hour. The other Invader is hard to access at the moment because of the B-17 restoration.
That airframe looked pretty solid. Not sure when I might get to Birmingham to ever see it again. Hope it is well taken care of in its new home. I wonder if it will be stored inside and accessible to the public?
Vagabond wrote:.
bdk wrote:Don’t see two Invaders at Robins AFB. Have they moved the old one somewhere else?
Bdk- one of the Robins A-26s was moved to Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard Base in June 2020
Mon Sep 28, 2020 2:32 pm
Vzlet wrote:CS, I had a chance to see the storage and restoration hangars just over a week ago. Photos from there are included in this Flickr set:
https://flic.kr/s/aHsmQXaiP3Time was a factor (as always at the NMUSAF!), so I didn't attempt to capture everything, especially if I had previous shots. If you have any specific questions, just ask.
Wow, they have a second Zero? I had no idea. In the 80s they had a tail on display in the WW2 section of the Museum. Is this that wreak, or did that get used in the rebuild of the Zero now on display?
Thanks,
Jim
Mon Sep 28, 2020 3:49 pm
I see the Dragon Rapide is being taken to bits.
I wonder if they have found a suitable trade, or if they are just making more room to store things.
That's a real interesting set of shots. Lots of history there.
Andy
Mon Sep 28, 2020 4:15 pm
Vzlet wow thanks that was great. I am reassured by just seeing some of these again. i feel great unease at any plans ever to divest. I'm happy to have a glimpse and I like this even better than the museum proper. all eras mixed up, very worn, with dust and grime and faded paint. this is how i like it. i don't want anything to ever leave the collection, i just want it to grow, and i want to see all the things i expect to see, and more new additions. This very cool section should be open to the public.
Mon Sep 28, 2020 6:49 pm
DH82EH wrote:I see the Dragon Rapide is being taken to bits.
I wonder if they have found a suitable trade, or if they are just making more room to store things.
That's a real interesting set of shots. Lots of history there.
Andy
The Dragon Rapide has been acquired by Scott Glover's Mid America Flight Museum and will be restored to flying condition. I believe the work is going to be done at the MAFM restoration facility in Urbana, Ohio.
Awesome gallery from the NMUSAF storage hangars! There are a few aircraft included that I have never seen photographed and some I'd never seen a color photo of. Especially nice to see the B-23 and C-39. I am surprised the P-63 is no longer on display.
Tue Sep 29, 2020 12:26 pm
-Tours have not restarted. I was fortunate to have an escort to take me through the buildings. (Like, real fortunate!)
-The Zero is in a crate marked as "Zero number 9". What I could see of the fuselage looked somewhat intact, if in fairly rough shape. The sheet metal is amazingly thin! (I don't know if that is lightweight design, corrosion, or both!)
-My escort did mention that the Dragon Rapide was headed to a facility in Ohio, so that could well be the MAFM location.
-The YC-125 is indeed parked out front. The Piper Enforcer looked unchanged from the shots the museum has online with the exchange offer.
-Besides the P-63, the EF-111, and the C-45 have been taken off display.
Tue Sep 29, 2020 4:13 pm
kalamazookid wrote:DH82EH wrote:I see the Dragon Rapide is being taken to bits.
I wonder if they have found a suitable trade, or if they are just making more room to store things.
That's a real interesting set of shots. Lots of history there.
Andy
The Dragon Rapide has been acquired by Scott Glover's Mid America Flight Museum and will be restored to flying condition. I believe the work is going to be done at the MAFM restoration facility in Urbana, Ohio.
Awesome gallery from the NMUSAF storage hangars! There are a few aircraft included that I have never seen photographed and some I'd never seen a color photo of. Especially nice to see the B-23 and C-39. I am surprised the P-63 is no longer on display.
Thanks Matt.
That's great to hear. Nice to know she will fly again. Such a lovely machine.
Practically the very definition of "Art Deco"
Tue Sep 29, 2020 4:38 pm
About DH Rapides.....the one damaged at Abbotsford a couple of years back is being rebuilt.
Tue Sep 29, 2020 4:41 pm
JohnB wrote:The Wiki list doesn't seem to list all the aircraft controlled by the Museum but displayed elsewhere...A long list if it includes all the city park and memorial aircraft.
Here's same list Sean
posted above, but sorted by location:
Loaned Aircraft by LocationAerial Visuals also has their own version:
National Museum of the United States Air Force Loan ProgramVagabond wrote:bdk wrote:Don’t see two Invaders at Robins AFB. Have they moved the old one somewhere else?
Bdk- one of the Robins A-26s was moved to Sumpter Smith Joint National Guard Base in June 2020
And I can't believe they put the
one they received from NASM outside! That airplane had been in indoor storage. It should have been stored inside disassembled until they could make room to display it intact - not put outside where it will be weather beaten.
AirJimL2 wrote:Wow, they have a second Zero? I had no idea. In the 80s they had a tail on display in the WW2 section of the Museum. Is this that wreak, or did that get used in the rebuild of the Zero now on display?
According to Century Aviation, for their restoration NMUSAF provided:
a partially restored airframe and a second airframe that was recovered from the South Pacific Islands several years ago.
So I'm assuming
this was the second airframe.
Tue Sep 29, 2020 6:14 pm
JohnB wrote:About DH Rapides.....the one damaged at Abbotsford a couple of years back is being rebuilt.
That is my undertanding as well John.
I'm pretty sure it was the intetion of Mr. Sessions all along.
It was a most unfortunate incident. Rapides are notorious for being a handful in a crosswind.
When they were new, runways were a novelty.
The paved runway, invented the crosswind!
Wed Sep 30, 2020 10:38 am
The A-26 from the NASM was assembled and inside next to the B-17 restoration when I was there last, looking good. Is the one pictured outside the old one that was just taken apart and moved away?
Noha307 wrote:And I can't believe they put the
one they received from NASM outside! That airplane had been in indoor storage. It should have been stored inside disassembled until they could make room to display it intact - not put outside where it will be weather beaten.
Wed Sep 30, 2020 8:42 pm
bdk wrote:The A-26 from the NASM was assembled and inside next to the B-17 restoration when I was there last, looking good. Is the one pictured outside the old one that was just taken apart and moved away?
I'm pretty sure the one pictured outside is the one from NASM (44-34610) since it has a solid nose and the one that was taken apart (
44-35732?) has a plexiglas nose. (They appear to be in the exact same spot as well as have the same general bare metal paint scheme, so that doesn't help the confusion.) The pictures were present
when the page was archived back in 2017, so maybe it was originally outside, but was later moved inside. I hope so.
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