A fascinating day with aircraft before heading south to Truma’s facility in Elkhart.
Open at 0900, we were some of the first Air Zoo Aerospace & Science Museum customers in the lobby.
One of the premier exhibits is an SR-71 Blackbird spy plane. A platform let us get up close to the cockpit.
An SR-71 engine is displayed without the cowling. These pushed the plane to speeds over 2,000 miles per hour. This particular plane was used by the Air Force until 1990 and then again by NASA in 1999 to study future supersonic and hypersonic engines and aircraft.
A very realistic, operating, model of the SR-71 sits next to the prototype. The model starts on propane, runs on kerosene, and can fly 200 mph!
The warpaint on this B-25 Mitchell Bomber and the array of 12 nose guns would strike fear into any enemy.
Less common, this Curtis-Wright XP-55 “The Ascender” (1943) is the only remaining one of three built during WWII.
Moving into the jet age, there is a Vought F-8J Crusader. These were the first carrier based aircraft to break the sound barrier.
Something we hadn’t seen before was a Milner Motors Aerocar. After flying, the wings could be folded to allow driving on regular roads.
Two planes were undergoing restoration. Both were found in Lake Michigan. We learned that the Navy converted 3 ships by adding carrier deck replicas to train pilots in WWII. Unfortunately, a lot of the planes ended up in the lake!
In this photo, the recovered part is on the right. It is being used as a template to fabricate the replacement on the left.
One of the partially reconstructed planes is supported by this gantry that allows for rotation of the aircraft.
Here’s my favorite plane of the day. We’ve had great adventures in a sailboats and RV’s. Think of the adventures we could have in this Grumman G-73 Mallard (1947-Present).