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The Fw-190 is on loan to NMUSAF and on display in Dayton.
The VB-26B is on loan to Warner Robins AFB
My understanding is that the B-26 was deaccessed (gifted, not loaned). Would like to hear that corrected.
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In my humble opinion, more of the planes in storage should be loaned out to museums who have the ability to restore them and then display them like the Ascender @ the Air Zoo.
My understanding is that the Ascender is only an external restoration. Also, there is the Vought "Flapjack" fully restored by Vought volunteers and on I think a ten-year loan to the Frontiers of Flight Museum in Dallas. (Yes, NASM should do more of this: a free rstoration to them, done well before they would ever get to it. Always an issue is whether a NASM-quality restoration can be done).
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When does the NASM anticipate Flak Bait will go on display as a whole aircraft?
I think it will be on the near or other side of 2030. The object here is more preservation than restoration; preserving the old is always more time-consuming that replacing with new-built.
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It will be 100's of years before all the planes @ Garber are restored.
No, it will be well less than that, once they come around to the old pace. I hope that will be after the Renovation is complete. That will empty out most of the current storage module (M1), with another maybe built by then (2025) or soon after; these cost about $50M each. I think the plan then is to start moving most of the Garber Collection over, and with that work will seriously begin on preservation and restoration of aircraft.
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Anyone have a list of what is still at Garber?
Here is your list of NASM aircraft engines (all of them, as of 2010), enough to keep you busy for a long time.
http://www.enginehistory.org/Convention/2010/garber_artifacts.shtmlKevin