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Yuri’s Day Celebrates Spaceflight with Family Programs, Personalities, DJs and Dance

PRESS RELEASE

The Museum’s April 13 Yuri’s Day is a celebration of human space exploration with family activities, an astronaut, an author, some droids and cosplayers, and of course music and dance. Highlighting the event is the Northwest’s first use of the cutting-edge Vibrotextile
™
haptic wearables to provide a more engaging dance experience for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community. c89.5 will broadcast live DJ sets from DJ D-Double-J and special headlining artist, Anabel Englund. This radical experience is the result of the Museum’s partnership with c89.5, Seattle Children’s, and the Not Impossible Labs Music: Not Impossible project. Yuri’s Day also offers a presentation by Inspiration4 astronaut Chris “Hanks” Sembroski, a book signing with Space Oddities author, Joe Cuhaj, VR experiences, a 360° photobooth, droids with the Pacific Northwest R2 Builders Club, cosplayers from the 501st Legion, plus representatives from The Mars Society and the Seattle Area LEGO Users Group. Space-themed costumes are encouraged.​

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Launch of Vostok 1

Yuri’s Night, the 21+ space party, is a separately ticketed event that begins at 6 p.m.

SCHEDULE

Discovering My Path to Space – Presentation by Inspiration4 Astronaut Chris Sembroski

11 a.m. to Noon

Chris “Hanks” Sembroski represented the pillar of Generosity as part of the crew of Inspiration4 by serving as Mission Specialist on the first all-civilian mission to orbit. Sembroski will share how he found his path to space, and let it inspire you to find a path of your own. DanceABLE Access-Centered Dance Experience (All ages)

12:30 to 2:30 p.m.

In partnership with c89.5, Seattle Children’s and Not Impossible Labs, the Museum is turbocharging an all-ages dance event with accessibility at its heart. c89.5’s DanceABLE experience is the first of its kind in the Pacific Northwest, tailored to create a better live music experience for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community. “At Not Impossible Labs, we’re all about tackling absurdities – things in the world that make you stop and think, “Hold on. Seriously? No – that’s just not right.” Music: Not Impossible is our answer to the absurdity of music inaccessibility,” said Daniel Belquer of Not Impossible Labs.

DJ Line-up – c89.5 will broadcast live DJ sets from c89.5 program alum DJ D-Double-J and special headlining artist, Anabel Englund! “Dance music has helped me get through my life and it deserves to be experienced by all people in whatever way they can,” England, “I’m beyond happy and thankful for the people who have made it possible.”

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Register for Free Museum Admission to DanceABLE, To accommodate as many users as possible, participants must RSVP for specific time slots which include a quick ‘how-to’ and suit trial on the dance floor. DanceABLE Deaf and Hard of Hearing registrants, the ticket includes admission for the registrant, plus one guest. If they are minor, guest must be 18+. Note: By registering for DanceABLE, you verify that you are Deaf or Hard of Hearing or claiming a ticket for someone who is. This ticket also grants the participant entry into The Museum of Flight and all Yuri’s Day activities.

“c89.5 is all about inclusion. We wanted to build an event that allows us to include a group that is often left out of musical events and bring them aboard in a meaningful way. DanceABLE is just that kind of event, translating the audio sensation of dance music into tactile vibrations that can be felt on the body.” – Ron Chatman c89.5 Program Director

Space Oddities Lecture and Book Signing with Joe Cuhaj

3 p.m.

Space Oddities brings the unknown, offbeat and obscure stories of space to life. Author Joe Cuhaj will shed light on the human aspects of space travel that have remained industry secrets – until now: how the tradition of using a musical playlist to wake astronauts up began, fascinating tales about inventions like the Fischer Space Pen, Omega watches and Tang.​

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I was fortunate to live very close to the main highway between Heathrow and London and saw Yuri Gagarin and Nikita Khrushchev travel this route in an open top car in 1961
 
“Turning the Tide – 1944” 80-year Commemoration at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2024

PRESS RELEASE

EAA will pay tribute to the heroes and sacrifices made during the Normandy landings on D-Day (June 6, 1944), and throughout the year 1944, with an 80-year “Turning the Tide” commemoration at EAA AirVenture Oshkosh 2024 on July 23 and 24.

“As the number of veterans from WWII who are still with us are dwindling, it is important to commemorate the events of 1944, and the importance of the campaigns in both Europe and the Pacific to preserve freedom,” said Rick Larsen, EAA’s vice president of communities and member programs, who coordinates AirVenture features and attractions. “This year’s programming during AirVenture week will connect the human events and aviation history of that year so those of us today have a better understanding of those times.”

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P51B Impatient Virgin – John Muzala/ P51B – Old Crow Jack Roush/ Gentlemen P51D flown by Ed Bowlin/Silver Old Crow P51D flown by Jim Hagedorn/Miss Marilyn P51D flown by Connie Bowlin.

A collection of C-47s from the D-Day Squadron will be on display as part of the commemoration. The Squadron features a fleet of unique C-47 aircraft from throughout the United States. Many of these aircraft will be part of a commemorative mission to Europe in May and June 2024. The C-47 played a vital role in transporting more than 13,000 paratroopers to Utah Beach for the Normandy landings.

Afternoon air shows on July 23 and 24 will feature warbirds from both the Pacific and European Theatres including the World War II Airborne Demonstration Team The team will be jumping from their own C-47 using traditional round canopy parachutes, reminiscent of the paratroopers of the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions who risked their lives in Normandy.​

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Airshow. AirVenture. 2022. AV22. AV. 22. C-47. Warbird. Warbirds.

The Theater in the Woods presentation on the evening of Tuesday, July 23, will focus on 1944 as well. The presentation will be split into two parts; the first will retell the story of 1944, while the second part will go into detail about the aircraft. More details about the presentation, including guests, will be announced as they are finalized.

Additional aircraft that played key roles in 1944 have also been invited to participate, and EAA and the EAA Warbirds of America continue to plan activities as part of the commemoration.​

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About EAA AirVenture Oshkosh

EAA AirVenture Oshkosh is “The World’s Greatest Aviation Celebration” and EAA’s membership convention. Additional information, including advance ticket and camping purchase, is available at www.EAA.org/airventure. For more information on EAA and its programs, call 800-JOIN-EAA (800-564-6322) or visit www.EAA.org.​

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B-29 Doc Adds Statesville, NC To The 2024 Tour Schedule In April & May

PRESS RELEASE
The B-29 Doc History Restored Tour will land at Statesville Regional Airport, from April 30 through May 2. B-29 Doc, one of 1,644 B-29 Superfortress aircraft built by the Boeing Company in Wichita, KS, during World War II, will be available for ground and cockpit tours, as well as B-29 Doc Flight Experience rides during the tour stop in Statesville.​

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“When you can climb inside a historic aircraft and experience real-life history in person, it’s inspiring,” said Statesville Airport Director John Ferguson. “We are thrilled to be able to host B-29 Doc and give people a chance to see this incredibly rare warbird.”

B-29 Doc Flight Experience tickets are on sale now at www.b29doc.com/rides. Ground and cockpit tour tickets will be available for purchase on the days of the event at the gate. While the aircraft is on the ground, visitors will be able to climb inside the cockpit through the forward bomb bay to get a look inside one of only two B-29 Superfortresses still airworthy and flying today.​

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“The legacy of our nation’s airpower during World War II was built on aircraft like the B-29 Superfortress,” said Josh Wells, B-29 Doc executive director. “Being able to showcase and honor the legacies of the men and women who designed, built, flew and maintained B-29s and other warbirds provides a unique and up-close experience to learn about our nation’s history.”

The tour stop in Statesville will be in the middle of a six-week tour for Doc, which will launch out of its home base in Wichita, KS, in mid-April for tour stops in seven states, including South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, New Jersey, Delaware, Ohio, and Indiana. More information about the B-29 Doc tour schedule is available at www.b29doc.com/events.​

B-29 Doc Flight Experience: Statesville, NC: April 30 & May 1​



Event Details for the B-29 Doc History Restored Tour in Statesville, NC

B-29 Doc will arrive at Statesville Regional Airport Monday, April 29 and will be available for ground and cockpit tours, Tuesday, April 30 and Wednesday, May 1 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both days. B-29 Doc Flight Experience rides will be available April 30 and May 1 at 5:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. both days. Ride flight tickets are on sale now via www.b29doc.com/rides. Admission for ground and cockpit tours will be $10 per person or $20 per family. Tickets for ground tours will be available at the gate. Public entrance for the event will be at Statesville Regional Airport, 238 Airport Road, Statesville, NC.​



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Top Secret Missions: A Month of the Military Child Event

PRESS RELEASE
The theme for this year’s event is Top Secret Missions. Groups from aboard NAS Pensacola will be in the Museum to share the “top secrets” of their jobs. Participants will find out top-secret information from many teams on base including NCIS, the Crash Response Team, Explosive Detection Canines, and Base Fire Department.​

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The Pensacola Lighthouse will also be here to share secrets of their own! Each registered participant will receive free admission to the Pensacola Lighthouse on April 13. Author Kathryn Hamlin-Pacheco will be here to share and sign her new book, “My Flight Suit Pocket.”

The Naval Aviation Museum Attractions Team will offer a FREE MOVIE for military dependents ages 13 and under. This event is FREE and is for active-duty or retired military dependents ages 13 and under. Registration for those 13 and under is required. The first 200 participants to attend and get their Secret Mission Passport completed with information from our exhibitors will receive a prize.

April 13, 2024 • 10 am–NOON Check-in: 9:45 am in the National Naval Aviation Museum, Blue Angels Atrium. REGISTER HERE.



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NAS Wildwood Aviation Museum Honored With 2024 Collaboration Of The Year

PRESS RELEASE

Naval Air Station Wildwood Aviation Museum (NASW) is thrilled to announce that Av-STEM Day has been selected as the NJ STEM Month 2024 Collaboration of the Year. This esteemed accolade, awarded by the New Jersey STEM Pathways Network, recognizes organizations that collaborate to deliver exceptional STEM programming, both locally and beyond. AvSTEM is short for the study within the fields of Aviation, Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math.

The collaboration, which also includes the Federal Aviation Administration William J Hughes Technical Center Aviation STEM Program and Cape May Airport Operations, has been honored for its outstanding efforts in promoting STEM education. The joint initiative to organize AvSTEM Student Day at the Aviation Museum provided Cape May County students with a unique opportunity to delve into Cape May County’s rich aviation history while exploring the exciting prospects of future aviation technologies.​

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Students attend the Drone Workshop during AvSTEM Day at NASW Aviation Museum.

“We are deeply honored to receive the NJ STEM Month 2024 Collaboration of the Year award,” said Austin Myers, Events & Communications Manager at Naval Air Station Wildwood Aviation Museum. “This recognition underscores the importance of collaboration in advancing STEM education and inspiring the next generation of innovators.”

The Aviation Museum, along with its collaborators, is excited to again host local schools for AvSTEM Day in 2024. In addition to its award-winning collaborations, NASW is excited to announce its plans to open up exhibit space on the 2nd floor of the hangar with a focus on STEAM – Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Mathematics. This new exhibit space will provide visitors with interactive and engaging experiences that highlight the intersection of these disciplines, fostering creativity and innovation among learners of all ages. For more information, visit Naval Air Station Wildwood Aviation Museum

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One of two TBM Avengers at the NAS Wildwood Aviation Museum out in the sunshine. She will spread her wings outside this summer during the proposed graduation ceremony. The museum has another example, still in its civilian air-tanker configuration. (image via NAS Wildwood Aviation Museum)

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WWII P-51 Pilots Meet and Share Historic Flying Stories

By Eric Allen

An historic meeting of two WWII P-51 Mustang pilots took place on March 12th in Auburn, California. Triple-ace Brigadier General C.E. “Bud” Anderson USAF (Ret.) (102 years old) hosted Colonel Joe Peterburs USAF (Ret.) (99 years old) for an afternoon of sharing historic flying stories. Most readers are familiar with Gen. Anderson’s story and significant military background: he is the only living triple-ace, with 16 1⁄4 aerial victories, and served in Korea and Southeast Asia as well as having a significant test pilot career before retiring with 30 years of military service. Col. Peterburs’ story and background may not be as well known.​

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Triple-ace Brigadier General C.E. “Bud” Anderson (right) hosted Colonel Joe Peterburs for an afternoon of reminiscing. [Photo by Eric Allen]

During the spring of 1945, Col. Peterburs was flying on a Boeing B-17 escort mission near Berlin when he shot down a Messerschmitt Me 262 turbojet. After shooting down the jet he was taking care of some targets of opportunity in the area and his North American P-51 Mustang Josephine was hit with ground fire that caused enough damage that he was forced to bail out at a low level. The Colonel survived the bailout but was captured and immediately became a POW. He promptly escaped and joined up with a Russian tank group, fighting alongside them until reunited with American Forces. Col. Peterburs went on to fly Mustangs during the Korean War and following, he transitioned to the H-model Mustang and Lockheed F-80 and T-33 jets. He would then go on to hold various command and staff positions both in Europe and stateside before retiring with over 36 years of military service.​

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A wartime photo of Colonel Joe Peterburs. [Photo via Eric Allen]

The conversations were exciting as most can imagine. The two Mustang pilots shared stories of how they operated their planes during wartime missions. Both pilots recalled their knowhow of Mustang flight operations as if they had just climbed out of the cockpit. Although they served in different areas they shared many of the same tricks of the trade to get the most out of their machines. A few war stories were shared between the two veterans that were enjoyed by the small group gathered that afternoon. Both men spoke fondly about their ground crews and acknowledged the big role the ground crews played in their success as pilots. Col Peterburs’ granddaughter Sabrina and Gen. Anderson’s son Jimmy were in attendance along with a few close friends of both gentlemen.​

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[Photo by Eric Allen]

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C-53 Takes Flight in New Livery as ‘Spirit of Douglas’

The C-53 N8336, previously known as Spirit of Benovia, has been renamed Spirit of Douglas and a brand new livery was applied by DC-3 restoration experts Aerometal International, Inc. in the U.S. The fully restored C-53 has been renamed in honor of Donald Douglas Sr., who is considered the father of commercial aviation. In 1914, Douglas was the first person to be awarded a Bachelor of Science in Aeronautical Engineering at MIT, completing the four-year course in half the time. After several years with the Glenn Martin Company where he rose to chief engineer at the age of 23, Douglas struck out on his own with the Douglas Aircraft Company and went from employing 22 people to being the fourth-largest business in the US during WWII.

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Spirit of Douglas was built at Douglas Aircraft’s plant in Santa Monica, California, and accepted by the U.S. Army Air Forces (USAAF) on June 29th, 1942. The C-53 was primarily designed to drop paratroopers and tow gliders and differs from the C-47 in having a lighter strength floor and no double cargo door. She flew out to Karachi, India (now in Pakistan) in August 1942, initially for service with the Royal Air Force as serial FJ712, but transferred to the 1st Troop Carrier Squadron, 10th Air Force, USAAF in late December 1942, serving the rest of the war in the CBI Theatre. She went into civilian ownership in India, then China right after WWII, being owned for a while by General Claire Chennault, reportedly flying Chiang Kai-shek in the Civil Air Transport company out of Taipei, Formosa (now Taiwan).

During the mid-50s, the aircraft received a luxurious VIP interior and an AiResearch Maximizer speed kit. She passed through several other owners over the years, including the Kalamazoo Aviation History Museum during the 1980s until its last owners Joe Anderson and Mary Dewane, owners of Benovia Winery in California. The aircraft is currently owned and lovingly cared for by a New Zealand-based family.​

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In 2019 the then-named Spirit of Benovia flew to Europe as part of the D-Day Squadron’s contingent.

The Spirit of Douglas will take part in D-Day commemoration events in Europe in mid-2024 before retracing sectors from its past in North America, Asia, and India. The Spirit of Douglas project is being funded by a family inspired by history. Its journey throughout 2024 is being captured by award-winning French filmmaker Gregory Le Moigne who will produce a documentary telling the story of the history of the DC3, the history of the Spirit of Douglas, and the key role of the pioneering and innovative Donald Douglas Sr. in connecting people and trade globally. The documentary is expected to be released in the fullness of time.​

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Exploring the Skies: How Modern Technologies Make Aviation Accessible to New Market Players

“Vintage Aviation News staff did not write this article; the content comes via our partners who wish to help support our website.”
Modern technology is revolutionizing aviation, making the skies more accessible. Recent technological transformations have created numerous benefits for airlines, passengers, and the environment. Such changes help reduce fuel consumption, improve travel experience, and make flying safer and more convenient. From in-flight entertainment to fast check-ins, people expect the best from their air travel, and modern airlines can deliver.

After all, people can even play casino games on their flights online, from online slots to poker, without interruptions. In fact, you can even read a razor shark review on online casinos to know what games are the best for plane travel. Meanwhile, you can learn more about the latest tech updates that make aviation more accessible for all.​

Comfort and Entertainment​


Gone are the days of staring out the window, waiting for the journey to end. Modern technology has transformed the air travel experience into entertainment adventures.

These days, passengers can enjoy all kinds of entertainment choices. Most airplanes usually have individual touchscreens filled with movies, music, Internet connections, and games to anyone’s liking. People can catch up on the latest cinema releases, listen to an audiobook, or read reviews in Hungarian online at A legjobb online kaszinók a magyar játékosok számára 2024-ban. Playing in online casinos with friends, all while being so far in the air they can’t see the ground. Isn’t it a miracle of technology on its own?

You don’t want entertainment? For some people, being in the air provides a perfect opportunity to catch up on work or prepare for important presentations. On-board Wi-Fi allows passengers to stay connected to the outside world, whether checking emails, receiving calls, or working remotely on personal laptops.

This focus on passenger comfort and entertainment has long been a smart business move in air companies’ behavior. It offers a way to differentiate themselves from the competition and create a loyal customer base. A greater variety of possibilities during the flight can ensure happy passengers who are more likely to choose them again for their next trip. After all, traveling while watching a movie is much more pleasant than driving for hours to no end.​

Improved Navigation​


Imagine navigating a complex maze blindfolded — that’s what piloting used to be like, relying heavily on celestial clues and experience. Today, sophisticated GPS systems have revolutionized flight, acting as virtual co-pilots. These marvels of technology provide pinpoint accuracy, allowing pilots to chart a course with laser focus. This translates to a smoother, more efficient journey. No more battling unpredictable winds or taking detours due to unclear skies.

The benefits extend far beyond just a more comfortable ride. Precise navigation translates to shorter flight times, a win for both airlines and passengers. Imagine reaching your destination 30 minutes earlier, a welcome change for busy travelers. Moreover, with precise flight paths, airlines can optimize fuel usage, a crucial factor for new players entering a cost-competitive market. Modern navigation is more than just a technological marvel; it’s the invisible hand guiding airlines toward a faster, more efficient, and kinder future for the environment.​

Enhanced Safety​


Remember the days when turbulence sent shivers down everyone’s spine and near misses were a terrifying reality? Thankfully, those days are fading into aviation history. Modern technology has become a guardian angel, introducing innovative collision-avoidance systems. These intelligent marvels act as an extra set of eyes in the sky, constantly scanning for potential dangers like other aircraft or unforeseen obstacles.

Such technology builds an invisible shield around your plane, constantly alert and ready to take action. An alert instantly goes off in case of a potential threat, warning the pilot and suggesting alternative measures to the set course.

What’s best is that this incredible technology continues to improve, enhancing the safety of passengers and crew and fostering trust and confidence in airlines, especially new players entering the market.​

Fueling Efficiency​


Remember when plane tickets came with a hefty dose of guilt for the environment? Thankfully, that’s changing course. Modern aircraft are designed with fuel efficiency as their secret weapon. Think of them as sleek, eco-conscious machines that sip fuel instead of devouring it. This shift towards efficiency isn’t just about saving money for airlines (although that’s a definite bonus!). It’s about reducing the environmental impact of every flight.

Less fuel burned means fewer harmful emissions are released into the atmosphere. This is a win-win for everyone. Airlines, particularly new players entering a competitive market, can showcase their commitment to a greener future. A growing segment of environmentally conscious travelers can choose airlines that align with their values. So, the next time you take flight, you can do so with the knowledge that you’re contributing to a cleaner, more sustainable world — one trip at a time.​

Streamlining Operations​


Modern technology is revolutionizing aviation, making the skies more accessible. Sophisticated GPS systems ensure precise navigation, leading to shorter flights and reduced fuel usage. This benefits both airlines and the environment. Passenger safety takes center stage, with collision-avoidance systems acting as watchful guardians. Finally, technology streamlines the journey, from speedy check-in kiosks to automated baggage handling, ensuring a smoother and more relaxing travel experience.​

“Vintage Aviation News staff did not write this article; the content comes via our partners who wish to help support our website.”

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Restoration of the Smithsonian’s Ilyushin Il-2 Shturmovik

By Adam Estes

In the desperate and cataclysmic struggle that was the Eastern Front of World War II, which the countries of the former Soviet Union still call the Great Patriotic War, the Ilyushin Il-2 Shturmovik (Shturmovik being a general term for attack aircraft in the Soviet Air Forces) was deemed by Stalin to be just as vital to the Red Army as air and bread. Designed by a team led by Sergey Ilyushin in 1938, the prototype for what would become the Il-2, then called the TsKB-57, first flew a year later in 1939 and was just beginning to enter production and operational service when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941. As the relatively few Shturmoviks built up to that point where rushed into service, most of the factories tasked with building the Il-2s were forced to hastily relocate east of the Ural Mountains, where unskilled workers struggled to keep up with the production quotas sent from the Kremlin, but as the tide of war turned in the Soviets favor, the Shturmovik, much like the T-34 medium tank, would meet the Germans with numbers and determination. They were flown by crews from across the Soviet Union, who served as pilots and rear gunners, while ground crews worked tirelessly to repair and rearm Shturmoviks returning from the front.​

An Ilyushin Il-2M in flight. Image via Wikipedia

An Ilyushin Il-2M in flight. Image via Wikipedia

Over 36,000 Il-2s of both single-seater and two-seater varieties were manufactured, making it the single-most produced military aircraft in aviation history. With its armored cockpit and engine compartment and wide array of armaments, from 23mm cannons to unguided rockets and various types of anti-personnel and anti-vehicle bombs, the Il-2s provided close air support for Soviet infantry and armored units, and were a vital part of Soviet military aviation, from the defense of Moscow to the Battle of Berlin. After the collapse of Nazi Germany, many Il-2s were exported to the Soviet Union’s new satellite states, such as Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Mongolia, and Yugoslavia (though this latter state would soon become a non-aligned nation during the Cold War). The Il-2, which would be codenamed the “Bark” by NATO, also led to the development of the Il-10 (NATO codename “Beast”), which served not only in the latter stages of World War II but in the Korean War as well. A number of Shturmoviks can be found in museums in Eastern Europe, though three examples have made their way to the United States since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, including a single example currently under restoration at the National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia.​

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The Museum’s Shturmovik at its current location at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration, and Storage Facility in Suitland, Maryland. Image by Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum

The identity of the Shturmovik in the Smithsonian is still surrounded by mystery and ambiguity. It is a composite aircraft made from the remains of three or four Shturmoviks recovered from the bottom of lakes near Leningrad and Murmansk in the early 1990s. With the fall of the Iron Curtain t, it suddenly became easier for Western warbird collectors and restorers to recover wrecks of German and Soviet aircraft from the battlefields of the Great Patriotic War. In addition, it opened once-classified former Soviet archives to Western historians. And while more wrecks would be recovered up to the present day, the current situation with the Russo-Ukrainian War and the subsequent sanctions from NATO countries in response to Russia’s aggression has made it increasingly difficult for old wrecks to leave Russia or for Western scholars to visit those same archives.

However, during the 1990s, a Russian team of restorers would reassemble a Shturmovik in St. Petersburg (formerly Leningrad) out of several recovered wrecks. At the time, the Smithsonian was informed by Russian sources that the basis for their Shturmovik had been one that had been shot down on the Leningrad front on March 15, 1944 while being flown, and was being flown by Lt. Ivan Maksimovih Andreyev and Sgt. Goncharov. Later investigative work has revealed that there was little information to substantiate the story, and with no data plates recovered from the wrecks, the National Air and Space Museum has since retracted their earlier stance. Another complicating factor in terms of the restoration was the way in which the aircraft was assembled in Russia. In the article The Flying Tank, written by James R. Chiles in the June 2022 issue of Air and Space Quarterly, restorer Bill Hadden said, “It appears that they used paint stripper and sand blasting and whatever was needed to remove corrosion and old paint before rebuilding the airplane…. For instance, the serial number was painted on in several places when they were manufactured…. With essentially all the original paint removed, we may never know the identity of our airplane or its particular service history.” Nevertheless, the Russians installed an original, albiet non-operational, Mikulin AM-38 V-12 inline engine, reassembled the landing gear, and refurbished the cockpit. After decades of submersion in the frigid Russian waters, the wooden tail assembly had fallen apart, so a new assembly was built. Following all of this, the reassembled Shturmovik was coated in primer, but the final paint scheme was never completed because a deal had been made for the Smithsonian in a trade agreement.​

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A view inside the cockpit of the Museum’s Il-2 Shturmovik. Image by Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum

In the spring of 1995, the still-unpainted Shturmovik arrived at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration, and Storage Facility in Suitland, Maryland. At the time it had gone to the Garber Facility, aviation enthusiasts could go on pre-arranged, docent-led public tours of the facility’s numerous warehouses and its restoration shop. But in 2003, with the opening of the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Dulles International Airport in Chantilly, Virginia, the tours gradually came to an end, and those aircraft that had not gone to Dulles before the opening of the massive new museum would remain at Garber, away from public view.

The beginning of the ongoing renovations to the National Mall location would see some aircraft pulled out of Garber to be eventually displayed either at the National Mall or at the Udvar-Hazy Center, and with a new layout in store for the museum’s World War II in the Air gallery, the Smithsonian’s Shturmovik seemed the perfect fit to bring light to the Soviet perspective of World War II aviation. On November 18, 2021, the Il-2 arrived at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center’s Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hangar, where visitors can view the ongoing restoration projects from a second-story glass mezzanine.​

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Overhead view of Museum Specialist Jay Flanagan working on the new tail section of the fuselage he is building for the Ilyushin IL-2 Shturmovik in the background, while Museum Specialist Bill Hadden works on the horizontal stabilizer in the background in the Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hangar at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA. Image by Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum

After it arrived in the Engen Restoration Hangar, NASM restoration specialists began analyzing the Shturmovik and preparing it for restoration. In this evaluation, the wooden tail reproduced by the Russian team in St. Petersburg was considered to be a poor facsimile with numerous structural problems. Luckily for the Smithsonian, enthusiasts of the Shturmovik were willing to help, providing access to manuals and reference materials, which would provide valuable information once translated into English.​




The restoration staff has received further assistance from the Pima Air and Space Museum of Tucson, Arizona, which is home to another Il-2 recovered from the Eastern Front. Pima provided the NASM restoration team with digital copies of their engineering drawings used in their own restoration. These have been especially helpful in the refabrication of the tail action, which differs only from those built in wartime Soviet factories with the use of modern epoxy resin as opposed to water-based wood glues.​

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Museum Specialist Tony Hare adjusts the landing gear flaps for the Ilyushin IL-2 Shturmovik in the Mary Baker Engen Restoration Hangar at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA. Image by Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum

The restoration has also revealed traces of the original paint on several components, with the standard black, brown/tan, and green scheme on the upper surfaces of the aircraft, and the light blue paint on the underside. The Smithsonian intends to replicate this scheme, which was common on most Shturmoviks of the mid to late-war period. Other discoveries made during the restoration have led NASM officials to conclude that the aircraft was assembled in late 1943 at Zavod No.18 (Factory No.18) at Samara (known during the days of the USSR as Kuybyshev).

When the Shturmovik is complete, it will be placed on public display for the first time at the National Mall location’s upcoming Jay I. Kislak World War II in the Air Gallery alongside several other aircraft, including the Messerschmitt Bf 109G-6 flown by French defector René Darbois (previously covered here: Smithsonian’s Bf 109 Unveils a Hidden Story of Resistance ), the museum’s North American P-51D Mustang and General Motors FM-1 Wildcat.​




With the IL-2, the Soviet perspective of WWII/Great Patriotic War, made all the more prescient by the current war between Russia and Ukraine being fought on some of the same battlefields in which Soviet aircrews flew their Shturmoviks against the Germans, can be told in ways that the original gallery, opened in 1976, was unable to do. Among the stories of Soviet aircrews that the museum intends to highlight is that of Anna Yegorova, who after flying reconnaissance missions in the Polikarpov U-2/Po-2 biplane, would fly 41 of her 277 combat missions in Shturmoviks until she was shot down in August 1944, and was held as a prisoner in the Küstrin sub-camp of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, until it was liberatedin January 1945. Like many Soviet POWs, Yegorova was interrogated by the NKVD, and it would be twenty years before she was awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union, the country’s highest military decoration.​

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Jay I. Kislak World War ll in the Air will examine how the wartime revolution in technology and tactics redefined the promise and peril of military aviation, as well as explore the dramatic changes to flight and America’s role in world affairs.

Besides the example being restored at the National Air and Space Museum, there are two more Il-2s in the United States. Il-2m3 s/n 305401 has been restored to airworthiness at the Flying Heritage and Combat Armor Museum in Everett, Washington, along with parts of three other Shturmovik wrecks and powered by a Jose Flores-built Allison V-1710 in lieu of the original Mikulin AM-38 V-12 engine. The other is the aforementioned example in the Pima Air and Space Museum in Tucson, Arizona, and is currently on static display in the museum’s Hangar 3.​

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The Pima Air and Space Museum’s Il-2M Shturmovik on display in Hangar 3 (Adam Estes)

For more information on the Shturmovik and other projects, visit Homepage | National Air and Space Museum (si.edu).

Special thanks to Dr. Alex Spencer for his contributions to the making of this article.​

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Sebring Officer’s Club Rededicated

By Stephen Chapis

What do the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) International Motorsports Association (IMSA), and the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring have in common? This is admittedly an odd question, but strange as it may be, hundreds of Flying Fortresses and generations of sports racing cars have shared the same expanses of concrete at Hendricks Army Airfield in Sebring, Florida.​




As storm clouds brewed across the globe in 1940, Sebring city officials were seeking to have a military base built in their town. On June 12, 1941, after several surveys by Army Air Force officers, Congressman J. Hardin Peterson advised that 9,200 acres of woodlands southeast of town had been approved for a basic flying school. The City of Sebring purchased the land and leased it to the government for one dollar per year for 99 years.​

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Construction began on July 20, 1941, and by December the base was ready to be occupied. The field was a sprawling complex that included paved streets, water and sewage systems, frame buildings, two-story barracks, and four 5,000ft x 150ft concrete runways. During construction, the airfield was unofficially known as Kehoe Field, but on January 14, 1942, the base was named Hendricks Field, after Florida native 1st Lt Laird Woodruff Hendricks. Born in Ocala and raised in Jacksonville, Hendricks graduated from West Point in 1939 and deployed to England in July 1941 to train Royal Air Force crews on the B-17. On July 28, just three days after his arrival Hendricks died in the crash of a Flying Fortress.

On January 29, 1942, the first B-17 arrived at Hendricks and flight crew training began that March. At its peak the base was home to over 120 B-17s and by the time the base inactivation ordered came down in November 1945, over 10,000 pilots and crews had been trained. Even with those huge numbers, Hendricks had one of the best safety records in the USAAF, with just nine crashes that resulted in 45 fatalities.​

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Ship #31 is a brand new B-17-F that flew out of Hendricks Field. Photo courtesy of Sebring Historical Society.

The field was turned over to the City of Sebring on May 1, 1946, and became Sebring Air Terminal, but is known today as Sebring Regional Airport & Commerce Park (SEF). However, Sebring is best known as the birthplace of American sports car racing. The first race held at Sebring was the Sam Collier 6-Hour Memorial Race on December 31, 1950. It attracted thirty cars and was won by Frits Koster and Ralph Deshon in a Crosley Hot Shot. The first 12-hour race was held on March 15, 1952, and over the past seventy-two years, the greatest names in auto racing have competed and won at the legendary 3.74-mile, 17-turn road course.​

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Sports car racing and aviation have always seemed to have a symbiotic relationship and nowhere is it more prevalent than Sebring. Photographs taken during the 12-hour race often feature historic race cars and aircraft, for instance, there is a photo that shows a pair of Alfa Romeo Giulia TZs rounding a corner in 1966, and in the background is a derelict C-82 Packet. Today, that same corner is likely to feature a Corvette Z06 GT3.R with a Gulfstream G800 in the background.​




The length and configuration of the track have changed many times over the decades, but even today the race is run on portions of the same eighty-year-old concrete that made up the ramps, taxiways, and runways of Hendricks AAF. Each time the track was reconfigured or updated, a building from Hendricks Field was demolished or removed, the last of which was the control tower, which was brought down in December 1999, restored, and re-erected elsewhere. That left one nondescript building from Hendrick’s World War II days left within the perimeter of the race track. It was the Officer’s Club.​

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In recent years, IMSA and Sebring International Raceway, began researching ways to preserve and celebrate the history of Hendricks Field, and renovating the last surviving original World War II-era building made perfect sense. Track president Wayne Estes said, “You don’t want to have a building like this and just set it aside. It’s not a museum piece, it should be used. We’re trying to save the spirit of what it was originally intended for and still keeping the memory alive.” On Wednesday, March 13, 2024, the new “Sebring Officer’s Club” was dedicated and was in use during the 72nd Annual Mobile 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Presented by Cadillac on Saturday, March 16, 2024.

The club is located near the track’s Midway area and Crosley Valley between Turns 6 and 7. It features a bar, indoor seating for 40, patio seating for more than 100, and exclusive trackside deck seating for an additional 40 spectators. By design, the club’s interior is reminiscent of officers’ clubs from the era as well as today.​

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The walls of the club are decorated with charcoal drawings by local artist Samantha Zimmerman and depict scenes from the 1942 Hendricks Field yearbook, one of which shows the tail of a B-17 protruding out of a set of hangar doors. IMSA President, John Doonan said, “As a kid, I remember watching the Twelve Hours of Sebring and remember the cars going by that hangar.”

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On hand for the dedication was astronaut, and Florida native, Jan Davis, who has a direct connection to Hendricks Field. Davis logged over 673 hours in space during three Space Shuttle flights in 1992 (STS-47, Endeavour), 1994 (STS-60, Discovery), and 1997 (STS-85, Discovery) and her father, Ben Smotherman, trained at Hendricks in 1942. Upon completion of his training, he and his crew deployed to England in a YB-40. On just his seventh mission Smotherman’s Fortress was shot down and he spent 21 months as a POW.​




Before Smotherman deployed, he gave Davis’ then-18-year-old mother a necklace. During the dedication last week, Davis was wearing that necklace. “It’s heartwarming to me because he was here,” Davis said. “I know he was in this building, and I don’t know of any other place where I know he was here. It’s a real legacy for the future and people can remember what Hendricks Field was all about.”

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Cadet Air Corps Museum AT-10 Restoration Report

Periodically, we have presented reports from Chuck Cravens detailing the restoration of an ultra-rare Beechcraft AT-10 Wichita WWII advanced, multi-engine trainer, however, it has been more than a year since our last update. As mentioned in previous articles, the project belongs to the Cadet Air Corps Museum and comprises the remains of several airframes, but is primarily focused upon Wichita 41-27322. The restoration is taking place at world-renowned AirCorps Aviation in Bemidji, Minnesota, and here is their latest update on progress with the Wichita as it stands presently….​



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A rare color image of an AT-10 being refueled. (USAAF image via National Archives)

Most of the recent work on the AT-10 has centered upon the empennage. Each component has been removed – one at a time – from the original structure so that the vertical stabilizer stays in alignment without requiring a fixture to be made. As each part is reinstalled, the alignment remains true for the next part to be removed for restoration.

Some fuselage work has also taken place – such as trial-fitting the tail gear, tail cone, and the skin under the horizontal stabilizer.

The restoration team also applied a second coat of varnish to various wooden parts, the fuselage assembly, and the cockpit floor.​

Empennage:​


As Aaron inspected the project’s original empennage, it became clear that the vast majority of its glued joints would require separation and re-glueing. Thankfully, much of the wood comprising the inner structure was in good condition. As a result, Aaron was able to employ a procedure for restoring the vertical stabilizer which kept everything in alignment without any need for a fixture. He performed this task by removing only one rib assembly at a time for refurbishment. Separating this component into its component parts, he then stripped off any remaining old glue. After verifying each part’s airworthiness (fabricating replacements where necessary), he then glued the rib assembly back together and reinstalled the fully-refurbished component back where it belonged. Only two vertical stabilizer ribs required refabrication. By pursuing this process just one rib at a time, the remaining structure maintained its alignment perfectly.​

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AirCorp’s CAD department produced a rendering of the AT-10 horizontal stabilizer.

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A new root rib has been fabricated here. The unusable original component is lying atop the vertical as Aaron tests the new rib’s fit. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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In this photo, the spruce cap strips and upright strips are seen glued and clamped to the plywood section of root rib. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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This is the other rib which had to be refabricated because of damage to the original component. It is the third rib upward from the vertical stabilizer’s base. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The vertical stabilizer’s root rib is seen here reinstalled. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here we can see the new third rib (and a 1/16” plywood reinforcement for the rudder hinge installation) glued and clamped in place. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Aaron painstakingly sands the vertical stabilizer trailing edge spar cap to create a perfect fit. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Strips were glued and clamped to some of the forward rib sections. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here we see the locations where the restored forward rib sections will be reinstalled. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Clamping can be complex! (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Factory markings are always intriguing. The inked ‘F 133’ is an inspection stamp, while the hand-written “Globe“ in pencil indicates that this part was made by the Globe company rather than Beechcraft. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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These factory markings appear to indicate a part number change. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The fairing strip in Aaron’s hand fits between the vertical stabilizer and the rudder. It has a concave form which matches the rudder’s rounded leading edge. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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In this image, the rudder fairing strip has been re-glued to the rudder’s rear spar. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here the rudder fairing strip’s concave surface is visible. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The vertical stabilizer’s inner structure is nearing completion. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

Fuselage:​


This cockpit section is currently at the paint shop where the black areas of the dash and the instrument and auxiliary panels will be painted.​

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The cockpit floor is finished and has received its two coats of varnish. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The aluminum tail cone is in place for trial-fitting. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The tailwheel mount has been painted and mounted on the rear bulkhead of the wooden section of the fuselage. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here is a view of the tailwheel mounting structure, as seen from the rear. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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An unrestored tailwheel strut is trial-fitted to the mounting structure. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here is a view of the tail wheel strut from another angle. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The tailwheel strut is seen here protruding from the tail cone. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The horizontal stabilizer mounts atop this fuselage skin section. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Attach fittings for the horizontal stabilizer have been installed. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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In this image, a new belly skin section is in the process of being trimmed to fit. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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These brackets will hold pulleys for the control system. The brackets on the left and right are for rudder control cable pulleys, while the center bracket holds the elevator control cable pulley. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here is a view looking back into the fuselage from the forward end of the wooden section. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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This bracket is for a trim cable pulley. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Aaron is seen here restoring longerons which will run beneath the floor aft of the cockpit. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The floor aft of the cockpit has a removable panel which is held in place by Dzus fittings. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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The wooden section of the main fuselage is structurally complete and has had both required coats of varnish applied. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

Nacelle Components:​


The project has several landing gear mounts available to choose from; after each is inspected, the best pair will undergo refurbishing to become part of the restored AT-10.​

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The internal framework/landing gear mount from a Wichita awaits inspection. (image via AirCorps Aviation)

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Here is another Wichita landing gear mount/internal nacelle structure available to the project. The tubular component with a chain running above it is the retraction slide tube. (image via AirCorps Aviation)


Want to get involved?


AirCorps Aviation is constantly looking for new technical material related to the AT-10. Due to the rarity of this aircraft, and the relatively low number produced, acquiring engineering drawings, parts catalogs, maintenance manuals, and other documentation has been much more difficult than with our past restorations. If you have any AT-10 material or know someone who does, the team would love to hear from you!

Be a part of helping the AT-10 return to the skies! Contact Ester Aube, by email or phone [email protected] or 218-444-4478

Furthermore, should anyone wish to contribute to the Cadet Air Corps Museum’s efforts, please contact board members:​

Brooks Hurst: phone: +1 816 244 6927, e-mail: [email protected] Todd Graves: e-mail: [email protected]

Contributions are tax-deductible.​



And that’s all for this edition of the AT-10 Restoration Report. Many thanks to Chuck Cravens and AirCorps Aviation for this article.​

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EAA Ford Tri-Motor Tour Resumes

PRESS RELEASE

The excitement of the roaring ‘20s returns to the sky as EAA’s Ford Tri-Motor tour kicks off the 2024 season in April. The first stop on the schedule is at Double Eagle II Airport in Albuquerque, New Mexico, from April 4-7.

Stops already confirmed for 2024 include:

  • Albuquerque, New Mexico – April 4-7
  • Alamogordo, New Mexico – April 11-14
  • San Angelo, Texas – April 18-21
  • Midland, Texas – April 25-28
  • Abilene, Texas – May 2-5
  • Fort Worth, Texas – May 9-12
  • Ada, Oklahoma – May 16-19
  • Springfield, Missouri – May 23-26
  • Bolingbrook, Illinois – May 30-June 2
  • Cedar Rapids, Iowa – June 6-9
  • Peoria, Illinois – June 13-16
  • Lee’s Summit, Missouri – June 20-23
  • Madison, Wisconsin – June 27-30
  • Oshkosh, Wisconsin – July 22-28

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Photo via EAA/Dennis Biela

Additional tour stops will be added to the schedule as they are finalized.

EAA’s Tri-Motor was built by Ford Motor Company and first flew in August 1929. The airliner was flown in Cuba and the Dominican Republic for most of the 1930s and ‘40s until it returned to the United States in 1949 where it would serve a variety of purposes including barnstorming and firefighting. EAA’s Tri-Motor also appeared in two feature films, Jerry Lewis’ 1965 comedy The Family Jewels, and the 2009 crime drama Public Enemies starring Johnny Depp.​

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Ford Tri-Motor 5AT air to air photo mission in Port Clinton, OH.

Tickets aboard the Tri-Motor are $99 for adults, and $75 for children 17 and under. Every seat in the aircraft is a window seat, offering a view of the surrounding area. Each flight experience is approximately 30 minutes, of which about 15 minutes will be in the air.

Tickets for each stop will be made available for purchase as they are finalized. More information on the Ford Tri-Motor along with links to buy tickets can be found at FlyTheFord.org.

About EAA

The Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) is based in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and embodies The Spirit of Aviation through the world’s most engaged community of aviation enthusiasts. EAA’s 290,000 members and 900 local chapters enjoy the fun and camaraderie of sharing their passion for flying, building and restoring recreational aircraft. For more information on EAA and its programs, call 800-JOIN-EAA (800-564-6322) or go to www.eaa.org. For continual news updates, connect with www.twitter.com/EAA.​

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Presentation About Centennial of The “Moonshot of the 1920s”

During the early 1920s, the challenge of flying around the world was as daunting and exciting as the space race to the Moon in the 1960s. On April 6, 1924, the first successful mission to circumnavigate the globe took off from Seattle. It was a mammoth American military operation that lasted five months with elite crews and four specially designed airplanes (one named Seattle) that created a sensation wherever they went. Boeing Corporate Historian Mike Lombardi kicks off the centennial celebrations with an overview of the historic flight on April 6 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. The programs are free with Museum membership and included with general admission.

Lombardi will also look into Seattle’s connections to the mission and even later global adventures. In September the Museum partners with First World Flight Centennial and Friends of Magnuson Park for a four-day celebration of the world flight at both the Museum and at Magnuson Park.​

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D-Day 80 Heroes Remembered Photography Events

PRESS RELEASE

COAP Wings is delighted to announce an exclusive program of flight and photography experiences during the D-Day 80 Heroes Remembered celebrations. Three exclusive, professionally choreographed events, dedicated to photography and run by COAP Wings in partnership with Aero Legends in the UK and France, are planned to bring the D-Day 80 Heroes Remembered aircraft to life at North Weald. Each event offers something different, and each one is concentrated on capturing photography that commemorates this historic 80th Anniversary.​

In 2019 Steve Comber coordinated this fantastic photoshoot with reenactors and the airpanes of the D-Day Squadron

In 2019 Steve Comber coordinated this fantastic photoshoot with reenactors and the airplanes of the D-Day Squadron. Image via COAP Media

SHOOT 1: THE AIRCRAFT — WEDNESDAY, MAY 29th

The first evening photoshoot will offer the chance to capture imagery of D-Day 80 Heroes Remembered participating aircraft as clearly as possible, without re-enactors, and including engine runs of one or two Douglas C-47s. This event, hosted by Aero Legends and delivered by COAP Wings at North Weald, will commence at 1800hrs and finish at 2200hrs after the ‘Blue Hour’. TICKET £75: BUY NOW HERE

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C-47 Placid Lassie performing a “night run” for the photographers. Image via COAP Media

SHOOT 2: THE SCENES — THURSDAY, MAY 30th

The second evening event will feature time-travel living history scenes, capturing the essence of this historic event. This will include re-enactors, vehicles & aircraft on static display in the background to complete the scene. This event, hosted by Aero Legends and delivered by COAP Wings at North Weald, will commence at 1800hrs and finish at 2200hrs after the ‘Blue Hour’. TICKET £95: BUY NOW HERE

SHOOT 3: THE ALLIES FRIDAY, MAY 31st​

The third exclusive re-enactment photoshoot will feature Boeing B-17G Flying Fortress Sally B. This will be a daylight time-travel photoshoot in the afternoon, featuring USAAF re-enactors with C-47s as a backdrop setting the airfield scene. TICKET £75: BUY NOW HERE.

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Another beautiful reenactment image coordinated by Steven Comber of COAP. Image via COAP Media

AIR-TO-AIR PHOTO EXPERIENCES​


Fly with the historic D-Day machines in dedicated photo sorties — the most anticipated experience of the year! The exact details — in terms of the number of flights, which aircraft are on which days etc. are under development. You must register your serious interest and you will be kept up to date as the planning moves forward. As usual, there are no guarantees on results, based on any combination of weather, serviceability, participation, and flight parameters. All of that to come… But for now, you must register your interest in each event and COAP Media staff will be in touch personally.

UK AIR-TO-AIR EXPERIENCES — MAY 27th-30th

A series of dedicated photography flights operating out of North Weald over the period of May 27th-30th. This experience is limited to five people on each flight. The exclusive photo flights will be the most immersive experience of the year, as you fly alongside the aircraft taking part in the D-Day 80 Heroes Remembered work-up period. FROM £1800: REGISTER HERE

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C-47 Placid Lassie flying over the French countryside. Image via COAP Media

CROSS-CHANNEL AIR-TO-AIR EXPERIENCES — JUNE 2nd AND JUNE 5th

Fly amongst the entire armada crossing the English Channel and with historical drops over the significant D-Day sites in France. An exclusive series of incredibly moving flights, sharing the sky with the C-47s and Supermarine Spitfires over some of the most historically significant lands in the world!

• A unique chance to join the armada on the crossing over from the UK to France on Sunday, June 2nd.

• A cross-channel flight on Tuesday, June 5th for the return to Upottery, home of the 101st Airborne.

FROM £2800: REGISTER HERE

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A stunning photo of one of the D-Day Squadron’s aircraft flying of the the channel. Image via COAP Media

FRANCE AIR-TO-AIR EXPERIENCES — JUNE 3rd, 4th AND 5th

Self-contained flight experiences within France, operating from Cherbourg over June 3rd, 4th, and 5th and covering the drop zone practices over the historic sites. FROM £1800: REGISTER HERE.

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That’s All, Brother, Placid Lassie and Screaming Eagle flying a tied formation over the British countryside. Image via COAP Media

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VICTORY’S ARSENAL Theater at SUN ‘n FUN

PRESS RELEASE
The 50th SUN ‘n FUN Aerospace Expo takes place from April 9-14 at the Lakeland Linder International Airport in Lakeland, Florida. Among the annual Expo crowd favorites is Victory’s Arsenal Theatre, a daily showcase of select “warbirds” – historic military aircraft – and the stories of those who flew them in harm’s way. Each aircraft type to be featured played significant roles in WWII, Korea, or other conflicts, and were made famous by the likes of the Doolittle Raiders, Tuskegee Airmen, and other heroic pilots and crewmembers.​

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The sun sets on the Warbird Ramp Wednesday at Sun ‘N Fun 2017. Earlier that evening, the Mustangs gathered here were whisked away to shelter in anticipation of an approaching storm front.

Starting on Wednesday, April 10th, Victory’s Arsenal Theatre will present an aircraft each morning in front of the grandstands on the SUN ‘n FUN warbird ramp. At 10:00 am and again at 11:30 am, the pilot or owner of the aircraft will share their unique personal insight and history of that warbird’s service. Featured aircraft include everything from a venerable Ryan PT-19 trainer to a twin-engine B-25 Mitchell bomber to an iconic tri-tail Lockheed Constellation once used as a transport by General Douglas MacArthur and President Eisenhower.

Serving as the Victory’s Arsenal Theater master-of-ceremonies will be Ron Kaplan, former executive director of the National Aviation Hall of Fame and a contributing editor to Flight Journal Magazine. Based in Dayton, Ohio, Ron is also the founder of the Ohio Air & Space Hall of Fame and Learning Center and operates Warbird Aviation Art, hand-painting unit insignia, and authentic WWII nose-art on flight jackets and aluminum for collectors worldwide.​

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Paul Tibbets and Ron Kaplan, 1995. This was taken after his first signing of the edition of 20 smaller pieces that feature the ENOLA GAY nose-art

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2024 B-17 Flying Fortress Spring and Summer Tours Announced

By Scott Thompson of Aero Vintage.

As the spring and summer flying and airshow season gets underway, it’s nice to see all three of the actively flying B-17s in the U.S. these days have Living History Flight Experience (LHFE) tours or shows announced. The LHFE is an FAA-sanctioned program that allows qualified museums to offer rides in vintage warbirds to the general public as a bit of an exception to the normal operating rules for these old aircraft. The LHFE programs go a long way in keeping these B-17s in the air as a way to offset the cost of just flying these bombers period. With the price of high-octane aviation fuel jumping faster than auto fuel, one wonders how much longer it will be economically viable to keep flying these airplanes. Besides the direct operating costs, such things as maintenance and insurance costs have also skyrocketed. So, if any readers are interested…this might be the year. Do be aware, though, that these are old airplanes…you are not taking a commercial airliner…so weather maintenance and other factors may modify the schedules available below.​

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Sentimental Journey taking off at the Dekalb-Peachtree Airport in 2025… the CAF’s Flying Fortress will be touring North America this year giving rides and displaying before the public. The airplane will be back at the Dekalb-Peachtree Airport on May 27th (photo by Richard Mallory Allnutt)

The Commemorative Air Force’s (CAF) B-17G Sentimental Journey (44-83514/N9323Z) has announced its Flying Legends of Victory tour dates beginning on April 3 at Chino, California, and extending through August 18 at Akron, Ohio. Most of the dates are in the southeastern and eastern U.S., plus a few Canadian dates. Check out the schedule here. Rides are being sold in the B-17 as well as the CAF’s B-25 and C-47.

The Yankee Air Force’s B-17G, Yankee Lady (44-85829/N3193G), based at Ypsilanti Airport near Detroit, Michigan, has a schedule posted for the spring and summer months with appearances mostly in Michigan and Ohio. Appearances start on June 8 in Reading, Pennsylvania, and extend through August 11 in Muskegon, Michigan. No doubt more dates will be added. B-17 flights are $550 per person…no aircraft location is specified. Discounts are made of Yankee Air Museum members.​

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Yankee Air Museum’s B-17G “Yankee Lady” during a pass at Thunder Over Michigan 2014. (Photo by Mike Lambert)

Also actively flying is the Erickson Aircraft Collection B-17G, Ye Olde Pub (44-8543/N3701G). It has a few appearances scheduled for the summer in which they will be offering rides in the B-17. The first posted dates are June 15-16 at the Olympic (Washington) airshow, with subsequent dates announced at Wenatchee, Washington, on June 21-22. No doubt additional dates will be posted as they are arranged. Thirty-minute flights B-17 flights are $525 per person. Check this page on the Erickson Aircraft Collection website.​

The Experimental Aircraft Association’s B-17G, Aluminum Overcast (44-85740/N5017N), based at Oshkosh, Wisconsin, remains grounded for some long-term maintenance to correct a structural problem found during a routine inspection. We hope to see the airplane return to the skies and tour again in 2025.

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Disassembling Aluminum Overcast for the journey back home to Oshkosh after spending the past two years under repair in Punta Gorda, Florida. (image via EAA)
Many thanks indeed to Scott A. Thompson for allowing us to reproduce this article… his book, Final Cut: The Post-War B-17 Flying Fortress and Survivors as well as other titles are the gold standard when it comes to the airframe history it describes!

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Cleaners Embark On a High-Flying Mission at RAF Museum Midlands

PRESS RELEASE

Suspended from the ceiling, up to 100ft in the air, eight aircraft including a Vulcan bomber, were all given a light dusting last week as part of the annual clean and inspection. Other aircraft being spruced up include Canberra, Meteor, Sabre, Hunter, Lightning, Dakota, and Javelin.​

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Strapped into harnesses and with nerves of steel, the specialist cleaning team climbs the rafters of the building and abseils down to access the aircraft. No cleaning solutions are used on the aircraft, just good dusting using large soft fiber mops. In addition to cleaning the aircraft, the team will also be inspecting the suspension cables supporting the aircraft in their flying display positions.

Tom Hopkins, Curator at RAF Museum Midlands said: ‘The Museum’s commitment to preserving objects within our collection extends beyond mere display. It involves each aircraft and vehicle undergoing a regular inspection by our skilled Technicians and Volunteers. However, when it comes to the aircraft suspended from the ceiling of our National Cold War Exhibition, a unique challenge emerges. These iconic aircraft, reach up to 100 feet in places, and navigating such dizzying heights requires a specialist team equipped with the necessary skills and equipment.’





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During the cleaning, the Museum will remain open to visitors who can see the high-flying team from Rappel, industrial rope access specialists, in action. The Museum’s National Cold War Exhibition features 19 aircraft, tanks, vehicles, models, and memorabilia, and is the only place in the world where people can view all three British V-Bombers, the Vulcan, Victor, and Valiant, together and under one roof.

The Museum is open daily from 10.00 am and admission is free. Pre-book your arrival time online at rafmuseum.org/midlands.

The Royal Air Force Museum Midlands, located in Cosford in Shropshire, is a free museum dedicated to the history of aviation and the Royal Air Force in particular. The museum is part of the Royal Air Force Museum, a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Ministry of Defence and also a registered charity.​










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NMUSAF’s Storch Restoration Update, Livery Chosen

By Courtney Hale Caillouet

At the close of 2023, the National Museum of the United States Air Force (NMUSAF) announced they would begin the restoration of their Fieseler Fi-156C-2 Storch, construction number 4389. Storch is German for the word stork; its gangly landing gear provided this nickname. Designed in the 1930s as a light observation and liaison aircraft, it was adopted by the Germans because of its excellent STOL (short takeoff/landing) characteristics. The type is well known for being used in the mountaintop rescue of Benito Mussolini, where other fixed-wing aircraft would certainly not have succeeded. It was produced well into the ’50s, with additional healthy sales to the civilian world.​

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The restoration team at the NMUSAF has completely disassembled the Storch. The fabric – which was cotton and has likely been on the aircraft since it left Europe in 1973 – has been removed from the fuselage and wings. The tail feathers and control surfaces are yet to be stripped, but will eventually receive the same treatment. All the parts and their related hardware have been documented and labeled, awaiting reassembly. The team is currently working to refinish metal and wood surfaces, removing old paint and glue, as well as decades of dirt and grime.

As of now, no serious corrosion or deterioration has been found. At the time of writing the fuselage was being blasted with dry ice – this paint is not original and will be removed from the structure for re-coating, and although some of the original paint has become visible during this process it is not able to be preserved. As of now, the team believes that the engine can remain attached to the fuselage for the entire process, but that could change as things progress. With the aircraft having been displayed on the ceiling and out of the public’s direct view, some of the gauges had been removed from the cockpit panel. These were placed in storage and will be reinstalled for the final restoration.​










Recommendations for the livery were submitted for approval, with a final decision being released on March 19th: “The NMUSAF is going to go with the Deutsches Afrika Korps (DAK) Desert Camouflage scheme. The aircraft will be painted to represent one used by Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, commander of Nazi Germany’s DAK between 1941-1943. Markings will be 5F+XK. Choosing this color, markings, and insignia package will help the Museum better tell the story of Operation Torch in Northern Africa.”






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Cleaners Embark On a High-Flying Mission at RAF Museum Midlands

PRESS RELEASE

Suspended from the ceiling, up to 100ft in the air, eight aircraft including a Vulcan bomber, were all given a light dusting last week as part of the annual clean and inspection. Other aircraft being spruced up include Canberra, Meteor, Sabre, Hunter, Lightning, Dakota, and Javelin.​

RAF-Museum-Midlands-Suspended-Aircraft-Cleaning-11-684x1024.jpg


Strapped into harnesses and with nerves of steel, the specialist cleaning team climbs the rafters of the building and abseils down to access the aircraft. No cleaning solutions are used on the aircraft, just good dusting using large soft fiber mops. In addition to cleaning the aircraft, the team will also be inspecting the suspension cables supporting the aircraft in their flying display positions.

Tom Hopkins, Curator at RAF Museum Midlands said: ‘The Museum’s commitment to preserving objects within our collection extends beyond mere display. It involves each aircraft and vehicle undergoing a regular inspection by our skilled Technicians and Volunteers. However, when it comes to the aircraft suspended from the ceiling of our National Cold War Exhibition, a unique challenge emerges. These iconic aircraft, reach up to 100 feet in places, and navigating such dizzying heights requires a specialist team equipped with the necessary skills and equipment.’





RAF-Museum-Midlands-Suspended-Aircraft-Cleaning-7-1024x683.jpg


During the cleaning, the Museum will remain open to visitors who can see the high-flying team from Rappel, industrial rope access specialists, in action. The Museum’s National Cold War Exhibition features 19 aircraft, tanks, vehicles, models, and memorabilia, and is the only place in the world where people can view all three British V-Bombers, the Vulcan, Victor, and Valiant, together and under one roof.

The Museum is open daily from 10.00 am and admission is free. Pre-book your arrival time online at rafmuseum.org/midlands.

The Royal Air Force Museum Midlands, located in Cosford in Shropshire, is a free museum dedicated to the history of aviation and the Royal Air Force in particular. The museum is part of the Royal Air Force Museum, a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Ministry of Defence and also a registered charity.​










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Is this what mountain climbers, or steeplejacks do in their off-season?
 
British Columbia Aviation Museum Acquires Iconic Hawaii Mars

After more than two years of negotiations, and hard work by both museum volunteers and Coulson Aviation – Next Gen Firefighting, on March 30th, the British Columbia Aviation Museum announced the acquisition of the famous Hawaii Mars. Operated by Coulson Aviation Group, the Hawaii Mars flew from 1961 to 2015 in North America fighting over 4,000 wildfires with its massive water-dropping ability that could end a huge blaze in a single pass. These enormous red and white aircraft captured the hearts of British Columbians for how they saved BC forests, this is the main reason the British Columbia Aviation Museum, with the help of the province of British Columbia, decided to acquire iconic US NAVY WWII aircraft.​
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Hawaii Mars entering the water yesterday to begin preparations for the Ultimate Flying Experience as well as her upcoming trip to Oshkosh, Wisconsin for EAA AirVenture 2016. (photo by Rob Frolic)

After the current owners, Coulson Aviation Group, retired their Mars fleet several years ago, the BC Aviation Museum began discussions with the owners, the intention being for the iconic Mars to become the signature display in the museum’s growing British Columbia wildfire aviation exhibit. Discussions are still ongoing. When the donation is successfully concluded, the museum has exciting new upgrades planned to further enhance the visitor experience.

As reported by the Time Colonist, Lana Popham, minister of tourism, and Josie Osborne, MLA for Mid Island-Pacific Rim, will gather with representatives from the B.C. Aviation Museum and Coulson Aviation to make the announcement and tour the Hawaii Martin Mars water bomber. The announcement is also expected to include preparations to get the big plane airworthy and other logistics for the move, including assembling the necessary pilots, engineers, and other specialized crew.

Mosdell said Wednesday that tentative plans will see the Hawaii Mars make its last flight in the fall from Sproat Lake down the east coast of the Island. A flight plan would be issued in advance so thousands of people who have come to know the plane can witness the flight along the route and its landing on the waters of Patricia Bay on the Saanich Peninsula.​

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Nothing compared to the Coulson Aviation’s magnificent Martin Mars for shear spectacle though… It was a glorious thing to see in flight… (photo by Richard Mallory Allnutt)

Time Colonist also reports that the final flight of the Hawaii Martin Mars water bomber is getting a $250,000 boost from the provincial government as the iconic firefighting aircraft travels from Sproat Lake to the B.C. Aviation Museum in North Saanich. The aircraft will be brought up on a ramp at Canadian Coast Guard Base Patricia Bay, a former seaplane port, mounted on a trailer in a swivelling cradle and transported across Victoria International Airport runways.​

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Hawaii Mars and Philippine Mars at Sproat Lake, 2014

A flight plan is expected to be heavily publicized so people along the route will be able to see the plane fly a last time. The museum is raising funds to build a new hangar to house the Martin Mars Hawaii and other B.C. firefighting aircraft on land donated by the Victoria Airport Authority. The new exhibit will be interactive, inviting visitors to explore the features of the aircraft up close.

The British ColumbiaAviation Museum celebrates the past, present, and future of BC aviation with one of the largest aviation collections in Canada. Visitors of all ages will be amazed by our interactive experiences. For more information and to support this effort, visit www.bcam.net

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