Saturday, August 13, 2011
Travis Air Force Base Museum review (plus a nuke!)
Travis Air Force Base in Fairfield, California, has a free airplane museum. In order to get on base, you have to show your ID, car registration, proof of car insurance, and submit to a quick (5 minute) criminal background search at the visitors center just outside the main entrance. Then, a soldier will come by the center and you follow him/her in your own car to the museum inside the base.
There are about three dozen old-timey USAF planes parked. This Douglas C-124C Globemaster II was my favorite. It's so big and un-aerodynamic. Its clamshell loading doors could swallow up 200 fully equipped soliders or 127 patients lying on stretchers.
That's a Beech C-45H Expeditor underneath the Globemaster's wing:
You can even park your car next to some of the planes, like this F-102A Delta Dagger interceptor.
Here's an F-101B Voodoo.
F-86L Sabre. Its rival in the Korean War was the MiG-15.
F-84F Thunderstreak:
F-105D Thunderchief. Originally intended to drop nuclear weapons at high speed and low level.
Wing belonging to C-47 Skytrain:
The plane in the background is currently in use by the military.
The B-52 was much smaller than I had imagined:
Douglas C-133 Cargomaster:
The museum is run by volunteers and contains quite a few memorabilia and historic photographs. You can even climb into a couple of training cockpits.
The engine room was neat.
I did a double take when I came across this replica of the Fat Man atomic bomb (dropped on Nagasaki). It's on loan from the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History in New Mexico.
Labels:
Aircraft,
Geopolitics,
History
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2 comments:
I wondered where our Fat Man went to. Here is our Museum you might enjoy it http://www.nuclearmuseum.org/
@T-5: Thanks for the generous loan!
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