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Do any of you guys know of a good aircraft museum I could take my
family to here in California? I live up north and the closest thing I've ever been to is the local AB Museum which is sadly moving since the base was closed years ago. My young son Billy wants to see almost any military aircraft but likes the old ones too from wars past. I wouldn't mind one of those either. Any helpful suggestions? Many thanks, James Dandy |
#2
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In article , James
Dandy wrote: Do any of you guys know of a good aircraft museum I could take my family to here in California? There are a lot of musuems in north-central California. The USAF has museums at Beale (Merryville), Travis (just upstream from SFO), and McClellen (Sacramento). The former Castle AFB also has a large musuem. There are private museums at the Oakland airport, the Hiller Musuem across the bay off of highway 101, and a musuem in Santa Rosa. There was once a musuem of air navigation at Mather in Sacramento. That base has closed, so I have no idea what happened to the musuem aircraft and exhibits. The musuem itself was very nicely done. Anyone know what happened to the former Mather AFB musuem? I live up north and the closest thing I've ever been to is the local AB Museum which is sadly moving since the base was closed years ago. Which base is that? -john- -- ================================================== ================== John A. Weeks III 952-432-2708 Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com ================================================== ================== |
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James Dandy wrote:
Do any of you guys know of a good aircraft museum I could take my family to here in California? I live up north and the closest thing I've ever been to is the local AB Museum which is sadly moving since the base was closed years ago. My young son Billy wants to see almost any military aircraft but likes the old ones too from wars past. I wouldn't mind one of those either. Any helpful suggestions? Many thanks, James Dandy So Cal has some in Palm Springs ( I haven't been to yet. ) http://www.air-museum.org/ March ARB in Hemet ( I went last year ), http://www.pe.net/~marfldmu/ Planes Of Fame in Chino, ( went last week ), http://www.planesoffame.org/ Museum of Flying in Santa Monica ( never been, not sure of the status of this place ), http://www.museumofflying.com/ And I'm sure I'm missing a bunch. San Diego, I hear, has a really nice museum. Central California has a few. I'm sure a Yahoo or Google search will bring a few up. |
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Mark and Kim Smith wrote:
Museum of Flying in Santa Monica ( never been, not sure of the status of this place ), http://www.museumofflying.com/ If my memory serves me (from maybe five years ago), it's a nice, if not huge, museum that I remember as being a bit more civil than military. That's not to say no military. And they did have a few military planes out on the apron, that weren't inside -- a couple loans from Chino, I believe, and some that had just flown in from some show. I mention these because they're indicative that the place has some flux, or at least did back then, rather than being static. I think it's on or near the old Douglas plant. -- Blinky Registered Linux User #297263 |
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#6
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The museum at the former McClellan base in Sacramento is pretty good. The
best one up there in my opinion is Castle Air Museum in A****er, north of Fresno. They have a Vulcan, a 52, a 47, and the only B-36 on the West Coast. Definitely worth the trip. Nice people, fair gift shop. -- Jim Atkins Twentynine Palms CA USA "Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read." - Groucho Marx |
#7
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Do any of you guys know of a good aircraft museum I could take my
family to here in California? I live up north... Here are some suggestions in the broad general vicinity of San Francisco. The Western Aerospace Museum at North Field in Oakland (the general-aviation and cargo part of OAK) has an interesting collection. It's a short cab ride from the passenger terminal if you're flying. Take the Hegenberger exit from I-880 and turn west on Doolittle if you're driving. An outdoor static display of a Shorts Solent flying boat makes the last turnoff rather hard to miss to say the least. http://www.westernaerospacemuseum.org/ This is about five or six miles from the USS Hornet: http://www.uss-hornet.org/ On t'other side of the Bay is the Hiller Museum: http://www.hiller.org/ and a bit south of San Jose you find Wings of History: http://www.wingsofhistory.org At the former Castle AFB (in the Central Valley between Sacramento and Fresno, about three hours from the Bay Area, depending on what part of the Bay Area and of course on traffic) there is a museum: http://www.elite.net/castle-air/ Not aviation related, but worth a visit as long as you're in the vicinity, is the USS Pampanito, a WW2 fleet submarine in San Francisco: http://www.maritime.org/index.htm Figure on one or two a day depending on how much time you choose to spend at the exhibits (and other things in the area) and on drive time in between, which can be a large variable. Cheers, --Joe |
#8
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I recommend Blackbird Airpark:
http://www.edwards.af.mil/museum/doc...d_airpark.html It has the first Blackbird (the A-12 prototype), an SR-71 (slightly bent), and a D-21. Plus a J-58 engine and wind tunnel models. The A-12 was the first aircraft to reach Mach 3 and return in one piece. There's another little museum next to it with a variety of aircraft. |
#9
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Is this in the Lancaster / Palmdale area? I've vague recollections of
reading about it when I was in Ca a few years ago, but never got to see it. Although not aircraft, the NAWC at China Lake has a few nice missiles (tomahawk sidewinder etc) in it. Not sure if they've reduced the security, but you used to be able to get on 'base' if you spoke nicely to the marines! "Paul A. Suhler" wrote in message ... I recommend Blackbird Airpark: http://www.edwards.af.mil/museum/doc...d_airpark.html It has the first Blackbird (the A-12 prototype), an SR-71 (slightly bent), and a D-21. Plus a J-58 engine and wind tunnel models. The A-12 was the first aircraft to reach Mach 3 and return in one piece. There's another little museum next to it with a variety of aircraft. |
#10
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[...]
The A-12 was the first aircraft to reach Mach 3 and return in one piece. [...] What are the dates for A-12 and X-15 first flying at Mach 3.0+? Mark |
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