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#1
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I am posting this as a concern for the safety of the Naval Aviation
Museum in Pensacola, Florida and the serious threat that Hurricane Ivan is for the area. The museum is high enough above the water level to be safe from flooding and tidal surges but many have expressed concerns about the strength of the building that houses the fantastic collection. Then there are questions as to the protection of the aircraft that are not inside the museum. Would anyone with a connection to the museum like to comment on this matter? |
#2
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![]() "RA-5C" wrote in message ... I am posting this as a concern for the safety of the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida and the serious threat that Hurricane Ivan is for the area. The museum is high enough above the water level to be safe from flooding and tidal surges but many have expressed concerns about the strength of the building that houses the fantastic collection. Then there are questions as to the protection of the aircraft that are not inside the museum. Would anyone with a connection to the museum like to comment on this matter? There's a thread over on rec.aviation.military (NAS Pensacola vulnerability IVAN, posted Saturday, September 11, 2004 11:59 PM) that just had a discussion on this. You may want to pop over there. (¯`·._.· £ãrrÿ ·._.·´¯) |
#3
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"Larry" wrote in message ...
"RA-5C" wrote in message ... I am posting this as a concern for the safety of the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida and the serious threat that Hurricane Ivan is for the area. The museum is high enough above the water level to be safe from flooding and tidal surges but many have expressed concerns about the strength of the building that houses the fantastic collection. Then there are questions as to the protection of the aircraft that are not inside the museum. Would anyone with a connection to the museum like to comment on this matter? There's a thread over on rec.aviation.military (NAS Pensacola vulnerability IVAN, posted Saturday, September 11, 2004 11:59 PM) that just had a discussion on this. You may want to pop over there. (¯`·._.· £ãrrÿ ·._.·´¯) Gents Hurricane Ivan has passed NAS Pensacola and we do need a damage assessment of the Naval Aviation Museum and its collection. How did the glass windowed structure hold against the winds? Did glass shatter and let in sheets of rainwater inside the structure? Did the F-14 posted on a pylon in front of the museum hold on to its pylon? What about the aircraft tied down outside the museum? Did they stay tied down or were they turned into scrap metal after crashing against each other? These are what we need to know. There is nothing on CNN, Defense link about the damage and Early Bird is down for some reason since yesterday September 16th. Any damage assessment provided by anyone greatly appreciated by all of those who are interested in the old Navy aircraft preserved by the Naval Aviation Museum. Our regrets do go out to those of you who lost property in the wake of Hurricane Ivan and we hope all of the affected people are speedily able to rebuild their homes and their lives. James K. Goodwin |
#4
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"Larry" wrote in message ...
"RA-5C" wrote in message ... I am posting this as a concern for the safety of the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida and the serious threat that Hurricane Ivan is for the area. The museum is high enough above the water level to be safe from flooding and tidal surges but many have expressed concerns about the strength of the building that houses the fantastic collection. Then there are questions as to the protection of the aircraft that are not inside the museum. Would anyone with a connection to the museum like to comment on this matter? There's a thread over on rec.aviation.military (NAS Pensacola vulnerability IVAN, posted Saturday, September 11, 2004 11:59 PM) that just had a discussion on this. You may want to pop over there. (¯`·._.· £ãrrÿ ·._.·´¯) Gents Hurricane Ivan has passed NAS Pensacola and we do need a damage assessment of the Naval Aviation Museum and its collection. How did the glass windowed structure hold against the winds? Did glass shatter and let in sheets of rainwater inside the structure? Did the F-14 posted on a pylon in front of the museum hold on to its pylon? What about the aircraft tied down outside the museum? Did they stay tied down or were they turned into scrap metal after crashing against each other? These are what we need to know. There is nothing on CNN, Defense link about the damage and Early Bird is down for some reason since yesterday September 16th. Any damage assessment provided by anyone greatly appreciated by all of those who are interested in the old Navy aircraft preserved by the Naval Aviation Museum. Our regrets do go out to those of you who lost property in the wake of Hurricane Ivan and we hope all of the affected people are speedily able to rebuild their homes and their lives. James K. Goodwin |
#5
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James Goodwin wrote:
"Larry" wrote in message ... "RA-5C" wrote in message ... I am posting this as a concern for the safety of the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida and the serious threat that Hurricane Ivan is for the area. The museum is high enough above the water level to be safe from flooding and tidal surges but many have expressed concerns about the strength of the building that houses the fantastic collection. Then there are questions as to the protection of the aircraft that are not inside the museum. Would anyone with a connection to the museum like to comment on this matter? There's a thread over on rec.aviation.military (NAS Pensacola vulnerability IVAN, posted Saturday, September 11, 2004 11:59 PM) that just had a discussion on this. You may want to pop over there. (¯`·._.· £ãrrÿ ·._.·´¯) Gents Hurricane Ivan has passed NAS Pensacola and we do need a damage assessment of the Naval Aviation Museum and its collection. How did the glass windowed structure hold against the winds? Did glass shatter and let in sheets of rainwater inside the structure? Did the F-14 posted on a pylon in front of the museum hold on to its pylon? What about the aircraft tied down outside the museum? Did they stay tied down or were they turned into scrap metal after crashing against each other? These are what we need to know. There is nothing on CNN, Defense link about the damage and Early Bird is down for some reason since yesterday September 16th. Any damage assessment provided by anyone greatly appreciated by all of those who are interested in the old Navy aircraft preserved by the Naval Aviation Museum. Our regrets do go out to those of you who lost property in the wake of Hurricane Ivan and we hope all of the affected people are speedily able to rebuild their homes and their lives. James K. Goodwin Just heard a story on Fox News about the base, said millions in damage, base hospital really torn up and "all" buildings heavily damaged but no injuries or deaths among base personnel. Nothing was said about the museum though so I guess we're all still wondering. George |
#6
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In article , George
Shirley wrote: Just heard a story on Fox News about the base, said millions in damage, base hospital really torn up and "all" buildings heavily damaged but no injuries or deaths among base personnel. Nothing was said about the museum though so I guess we're all still wondering. I tried calling earlier today. One of the area codes for the base was not accepting calls, the other area code said that your call could not be completed. I also noticed that the musuem web server was down. Not good indicators. -john- -- ================================================== ================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ================== |
#7
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On 9/17/04 4:10 PM, in article
, "George Shirley" wrote: SNIP Just heard a story on Fox News about the base, said millions in damage, base hospital really torn up and "all" buildings heavily damaged but no injuries or deaths among base personnel. Nothing was said about the museum though so I guess we're all still wondering. George Does that mean that NOMI (formerly NAMI) got Whammied? Paybacks... Gotta love 'em. --Woody |
#8
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Perhaps a little good news--
I am clipping a phrase from some news copy: "The Pensacola Naval Aviation Museum, where the Navy houses its most valuable aviation artifacts, held up, officials said." The URL: http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories...709&ran=212492 |
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