View Full Version : Russian abandoned aircraft site
Bob Fry
November 22nd 08, 12:36 AM
"This engineering was in a museum Aircraft technicians in Moscow
earlier. But when a museum have closed, engineering have put on a
separate platform open-air and it became nobody necessary."
Nevermind the broken English. Photos of what's apparently a place near
Moscow for abandoned Soviet aircraft.
http://community.livejournal.com/abandonedplaces/1476594.html
--
Everybody sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences.
~ Robert Louis Stevenson
Typhoon502
November 22nd 08, 01:39 AM
On Nov 21, 7:36*pm, Bob Fry > wrote:
> "This engineering was in a museum Aircraft technicians in Moscow
> earlier. But when a museum have closed, engineering have put on a
> separate platform open-air and it became nobody necessary."
>
> Nevermind the broken English. Photos of what's apparently a place near
> Moscow for abandoned Soviet aircraft.
>
> http://community.livejournal.com/abandonedplaces/1476594.html
Jeez...there's at least one MiG-29 and one MiG-25 (or possibly even a
-31) in there. That's a fascinating find.
Gordon[_2_]
November 22nd 08, 04:00 AM
Better source - -
http://www.englishrussia.com/?p=533
EXCELLENT website that shows plenty of similar things. I suggest
bookmarking the site and exploring it at will - most folks on this
newsgroup will love it.
v/r Gordon
Graham Tanner
November 22nd 08, 11:17 AM
Bob Fry > wrote in :
> "This engineering was in a museum Aircraft technicians in Moscow
> earlier. But when a museum have closed, engineering have put on a
> separate platform open-air and it became nobody necessary."
>
> Nevermind the broken English. Photos of what's apparently a place near
> Moscow for abandoned Soviet aircraft.
>
> http://community.livejournal.com/abandonedplaces/1476594.html
I am very certain that it is the old Moscow Central airfield called Frunze
(aka Khodinka), which is at 37 Leningradsky Prospekt.
Easily visible on Google Earth at 55°47'16.00"N 37°32'13.00"E.
Graham Tanner,
London, UK
TJ
November 22nd 08, 12:35 PM
On 22 Nov, 11:17, Graham Tanner > wrote:
> Bob Fry > wrote :
>
> > "This engineering was in a museum Aircraft technicians in Moscow
> > earlier. But when a museum have closed, engineering have put on a
> > separate platform open-air and it became nobody necessary."
>
> > Nevermind the broken English. Photos of what's apparently a place near
> > Moscow for abandoned Soviet aircraft.
>
> >http://community.livejournal.com/abandonedplaces/1476594.html
>
> I am very certain that it is the old Moscow Central airfield called Frunze
> (aka Khodinka), which is at 37 Leningradsky Prospekt.
>
> Easily visible on Google Earth at *55°47'16.00"N * 37°32'13.00"E.
>
> Graham Tanner,
> London, UK
Correct.
There is 5 pages of images at the following. A very well known and
photographed collection.
http://www.airliners.net/search/photo.search?placesearch=Moscow%20-%20Khodynskoe%20Pole%20%28Frunze%20%2F%20Central%2 9&distinct_entry=true
TJ
John Szalay
November 22nd 08, 06:28 PM
Graham Tanner > wrote in
> I am very certain that it is the old Moscow Central airfield called
> Frunze (aka Khodinka), which is at 37 Leningradsky Prospekt.
>
> Easily visible on Google Earth at 55°47'16.00"N 37°32'13.00"E.
>
> Graham Tanner,
> London, UK
>
Another aircraft boneyard in the Ukraine
49°49'0.20"N 23°56'26.66"E
Ron
November 22nd 08, 06:36 PM
On Nov 21, 6:39*pm, Typhoon502 > wrote:
> On Nov 21, 7:36*pm, Bob Fry > wrote:
>
> > "This engineering was in a museum Aircraft technicians in Moscow
> > earlier. But when a museum have closed, engineering have put on a
> > separate platform open-air and it became nobody necessary."
>
> > Nevermind the broken English. Photos of what's apparently a place near
> > Moscow for abandoned Soviet aircraft.
>
> >http://community.livejournal.com/abandonedplaces/1476594.html
>
> Jeez...there's at least one MiG-29 and one MiG-25 (or possibly even a
> -31) in there. That's a fascinating find.
I think I saw an Su-27 Flanker too.
December 1st 08, 04:56 AM
On Nov 21, 4:36*pm, Bob Fry > wrote:
> "This engineering was in a museum Aircraft technicians in Moscow
> earlier. But when a museum have closed, engineering have put on a
> separate platform open-air and it became nobody necessary."
>Here is the place http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102950119900034403948.00045cec1dfb293e9ea92&ll=55.787762,37.534457&spn=0.002069,0.004785&t=h&z=18&lci=lmc:panoramio
<iframe width="425" height="350" frameborder="0" scrolling="no"
marginheight="0" marginwidth="0" src="http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?
ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102950119900034403948.000 45cec1dfb293e9ea92&ll=55.787762,37.534457&spn=0,0& t=h&lci=lmc:panoramio&output=embed&s=AARTsJr49c5JI befeW6q84O7UHkFQq62SA"></
iframe><br /><small><a href="http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?
ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102950119900034403948.000 45cec1dfb293e9ea92&ll=55.787762,37.534457&spn=0,0& t=h&lci=lmc:panoramio&source=embed"
style="color:#0000FF;text-align:left">View Larger Map</a></small>
It is near underground station "airport" on the Green line in Moscow
> Nevermind the broken English. Photos of what's apparently a place near
> Moscow for abandoned Soviet aircraft.
>
> http://community.livejournal.com/abandonedplaces/1476594.html
> --
> Everybody sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences.
> *~ Robert Louis Stevenson
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