If you don't know where Dayton, OH is, or that the Wright brothers did their subsequent heavier than air controlled flights there (the French actually had an heavier than air airplane that flew before them in 1890, but it only flew 50 meters and wasn't really controllable, so that didn't get saved in history, fair enough), don't feel bad, I had no idea where Dayton was either or that it was where the Wright brothers flew several years.
While there were apparently other fine museums nearby, I didn't fly all the way over there for them, or to learn about the business opportunities of moving my business to Dayton :)
I so ran out of time to go see this. Bummer...
Because of the Wright Brothers legacy, the :Wright Patterson USAF was based there, and in turn the (free) USAF museum was created next to it. Saying that it's big or awesome would be too easy :) It is with the Smithsonian annex in at Washington DC Dulles airport, the best flight museum anywhere as far as I know, and both are worth flying to just to go see them (in the case of Dayton, there isn't really much else to see or do while you're there, but the museum itself is well worth the trip). I flew there on a wednesday and spent all of thursday and friday from open to close, before catching a friday night flight home.
Because I went on the so called presidential tour twice (once to see the presidential airplanes, and had to go back a 2nd time just to see the X-Planes which were so awesome that I had to make a separate page just for them. Those are all due to move in a permanent exposition hall (#4) by 2016. Then, I also went on a 3h backstage tour to see planes being restored, and as a result, the rest of the time was almost not enough to see everying in 2 days. In hindsight, I could have spend 3 days there...
I have a highlight of the pictures below, but here are links of to the full picture galleries:
Misc: https://goo.gl/photos/8wyxjYgutTLgqkUK6
Early Years: https://goo.gl/photos/bXzd4rBH6PkXghd98
World War II: https://goo.gl/photos/Ca8kgNqdBpTaQZLZ6
Korea - Southeast Asia: https://goo.gl/photos/z4AAu3bu3vT6jAvj9
Cold War: https://goo.gl/photos/wNxjPwT2CE5qUHge8
Rockets, ICBMs: https://goo.gl/photos/SCYyMsX8nn6K8hk76
Presidential Planes: https://goo.gl/photos/Pad5UkhkjAMuRww6A
X-Planes: https://goo.gl/photos/yDQbfBhVAE5NYr9V9
Restoration: https://goo.gl/photos/1uLMtysydi8Zqtpr5
Historical locations: https://goo.gl/photos/YfD9WRw9G5H1VTAF9
Anyway, let's start: nearby, there are a few historical points of interest, including Huffman Prairie where the Wright brothers were testing their planes, but outside of the plaques to read, there isn't that much to see (the prairie is unsurprisingly a bunch of grass :) ):
Outside the USAF Musuem, there were also a few planes and barracks reconstitutions:
poor thing, its nose got stung by a bee... (boeing EC-135E, with big radar)
But let's get back to the museum:
the 4th hangar in the distance wasn't open yet, but will be in 2016
the map might not look big, but it is big
I started with the early years hangar:
I would not want to step in this :)
that's going to leave a mark ;)
The World War II hangar was next:
MXy7-K1, a Japanese Kamikaze cruise missile (i.e. the guidance was a human)
First German Rocket plane
shooting inside the prop, nice idea
The next hall was both the Korea War and Southeast Asia:
The A-3 lifeboat was a rescue boat that could be dropped from a B29 bomber
F-94A starfire
F-82G twin mustang, cool...
First MiG 15 that made it to the US thanks to a defector who brought it
F-86A Sabre
F-80C Shooting Star
F-84E
F100-F Super Sabre
RF-101C Voodoo reconnaissance aircraft
Nice ammo range...
B-26K
OV-10A Bronco
MiG 17F
MiG 21
F-4C Phantom II
They had a few leftover planes they stuck there (not Korea or Asia war related):
Boeing Bird of Prey was built to test stealth technologies
The F22 is of course a formidable aircraft from later years
The next hall is Cold War:
B-36J Peacemaker, kind of an ironic name for a bomber :)
SM-62 Snark long range nuclear missile
The RF-86F saber was a reconnaissance plane with fake machine guns stickers to look like it's armed
The WB-50D Superfortress
TM-61A Matador cruise missile
CGM-13B Mace replaced the Matador
B-58A Hustler, the supersonic bomber
nice to see how a plane is inside (F-86H Sabre)
RB-47H Stratojet
F-106
F-15 Eagle
RC-4D Phantom II
F-117A
F-16A Thunderbird
X-45A UAV
They also had a section on the first spy satellites. Before the digital world, they actually took spy pictures on film and would jettison the film so that it fell back on earth with a parachute and would get snagged mid-air by a recovery plane. Not very efficient, but before digital cameras, that was the best that could be done back then. Sure was inventive :)
these were taken by a U2 though
Another corner also had a space shuttle trainer:
The highlight of that room, however, were the B1 and B2 bombers. I had never seen either one up close, and I especially like the sleek look of the B1 (the B2 is an interesting engineering achievement, but it requires so much maintenance to remain stealth that it's not very practical). the B-2 was also very hard to photograph due to its size and where it was stored
B-1
B-2
The last room had lots of rockets, most of them ICBMs, the multiple generations of intercontinental ballistic missiles to deliver nuclear payload across the world. I didn't realize how massive those rockets were, and how some are big enough to deliver small satellites in orbit. It's only when you're standing in front of them that you get a sense of scale:
[rigimg:1024:5000*/5023*|oh look, more bombs (atomic this time), called "peacekeeper"]
That was it for the Halls, but I still have pictures from the presidential planes in that temporary hall on the USAF base. As written above, the other side with the X-Planes was totally awesome, and I wrote a separate page just for them:
And as the last bit, a few pictures of my 3H backstage tour in the restoration hangars
pulsejet
leaving planes outside in bad weather like they get in Ohio, definitely has a toll on them, hence restoration work
they redesign new pieces from scratch to match the old ones
new blood being brought in
shooting turrets
And this time, it's really over, way too many pictures, sorry :)
But if you want more, go to the Museum's web site for a virtual 3D tour