Jeg har skrevet om museet ved flere anledninger, men en god ting kan ikke gjentas for ofte. Jeg var der i 1967. Jeg kunne da sjekke inn i gate`n og kjøre rundt med min egen bil uten restriksjoner. Nå må en busses rundt. Allikevel, en storartet opplevelse.
Arizona's AvGeek Heaven, Part 1 - Pima Air & Space Museum`en
Arizona's AvGeek Heaven, Part 1 - Pima Air & Space Museum`en
Tucson, Arizona is home to the University of Arizona and also Raytheon
Missile systems. Those two companies, along with the US Air Force, form the
largest three employers in the city. However, Tucson is also home to a unique
AvGeek attraction, one that will astound any true aviation fan. The Pima Air
& Space Museum is located about a five-minute drive from Tucson airport and
on the boundaries of Davis Montham Air Force Base. The museum is the largest
privately funded aviation museum in the world, yes... the world.
When you enter the Pima grounds you will be greeted by a "gate guard"
statue unlike any I have seen before. The three-aircraft sculpture deemed
"beauty of flight" are replicas of a plane that never was. The YF-23 lost in the
race for the US Air Force's super fighter to the now F-22 Raptor. These three
fighters greet you to a museum full of some of the most amazing examples of
aircraft you will see. Unlike other aviation museums in the USA, the majority of
displays at Pima are outdoors. So, in the Tucson sunshine, you can wander around
outdoors and enjoy some aviation history. My kind of place!
First opened in 1976, the museum had 50 artifacts including aircraft,
helicopters, and missiles in its original collection. That has expanded now to
over 125,000 pieces in its collection, with more than 300 different aircraft
from small to large. The collection is diverse, from the world's smallest
bi-plane, to one of the largest bombers in the US inventory, the B-52 (they
actually have three of them). The museum even has its own restoration center, to
ensure that every piece of aviation history is in tip-top
condition.
The museum has five hangars dedicated to different indoor exhibits, and a
very large outdoor area with some of the larger pieces, the kind that won't
really fit inside a building. The main hangar hosts a wide selection of aircraft
and has a few different themes. There are pieces dedicated to film history, with
a T-33 seen in the movie Jetpilot, or an F-14 Tomcat from Top Gun. My favorite
part of the main hangar had to be the aircraft that I love the most; the SR-71
Blackbird. Who wouldn't want to see the world's fastest jet-powered aircraft,
which still holds records to this date and was designed in the 50s using a slide
rule? That is pure AvGeek heaven. There are two hangars dedicated to World War
II aircraft (one for the Pacific theatre, one for the European). In these
hangars you will see aircraft like the B-24 Liberator and B-29 Superfortress,
both of which saw heavy duty during the war.
The Space hangar is one of the smaller buildings, but has some of the more
unique pieces. A moon rock donated by Tucson resident and Astronaut Frank
Borman, along with an X-15 mockup. The X-15, a rocket-powered high-altitude
aircraft, was a bird that on many occasions exceeded 50 miles in altitude,
qualifying their pilots instantly for Astronaut status. The fifth hangar is the
restoration center, where large windows let you peek inside and see how some of
the aircraft look while undergoing the change back to display condition. There
is a sixth building on site, that is actually a museum within a museum; the
390th Bomb Group Memorial. Centered around the restored B-17G Flying Fortress
"I'll Be Around" it pays tribute to the men who fought for the 8th Air Force
based out of England between 1943 and 1945.
The icing on the cake for Pima, though, is the outdoor exhibits. The space
you saw inside was nothing compared to what is outside. The outdoor exhibits
would take about a mile to walk around them all, however you don't have to do
all the walking. You can hop onboard a tram tour (minimal extra cost) that will
take you around all of the aircraft and give you insight into some unique ones.
I have been to a number of aircraft museums in the US and overseas, and I saw
aircraft here that I had never seen before. From helicopters to fighters, to
bombers and the true heavy aircraft, they have it all. Don't worry if you didn't
take a tram tour - you can still get a good history on the aircraft outside.
Each plane has a small QR code, which when scanned with a smartphone will take
you to the history and description of the aircraft.
Although there are so many good pieces out here, the best part is that
there is something for everyone. Not into the military pieces? There are
numerous planes that would make an airliner fan happy, like a 737 that was
delivered directly to Tucson from China Southern (and still wearing their
livery), or how about a VC-137 that flew as Air Force Two and was the same
aircraft to actually return 54 Americans held in Iran for 444 days during the
Iranian Hostage Crisis? Into military aircraft? My favorites would have to be
the Avro Shackleton (what looks like a weird Lancaster bomber, but is actually
an early AEW&C aircraft) or the B-36J Peacemaker, an aircraft that not only
had six rear-facing piston engines, it has four jet engines as well - that is
one large bird!
You can easily spend all day at the museum, but you need to allow yourself
plenty of time to wander around and just soak in the history. One thing that is
essential when you visit Pima though is to do the famous "Boneyard Tour" where
you get the opportunity to board a bus for a tour of the Davis Montham Air Force
Base and the Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG). But you can
find out more about AMARG in the next installment of our two-piece
series.
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