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Yes.Anyone been to the air museum at Darwin?
Highly recommended. I will attempt to find some pics.
B52 in the centre of the hanger with everything else around it.
			
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							Yes.Anyone been to the air museum at Darwin?
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Thanks. Thinking of visiting mid year.Yes.
Highly recommended. I will attempt to find some pics.
a few weeks ago. Photos in my trip report Kakadon't. Great little museumAnyone been to the air museum at Darwin?
 
					
				this is the link to the trip report Kakadon't. A wet weekend in the top end.Thanks. Thinking of visiting mid year.
Yes next time in Melbourne I'm going to do the museum.I've heard that the Moorabbin Air Museum has a decent little set up.
And I've always enjoyed a wander through the RNZAF in Christchurch.
Go to where it all began! You get a good taste in the National Air and Space Museum in DC but I just had to go to say I've been to Kittyhawk.

Wright Brothers National Memorial (U.S. National Park Service)
Wind, sand, and a dream of flight brought Wilbur and Orville Wright to Kitty Hawk, North Carolina where, after four years of scientific experimentation, they achieved the first successful airplane flights on December 17, 1903.<br /><br />With courage and perseverance, these self-taught engineers...www.nps.gov
Lot of history in this area, The Outer Banks. Very beautiful beaches and coastline. The driving is superb.
 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		The B52s and their refueller aircraft KC135s (I think) were regular visitors to Darwin in the mid 1980s, hence a B52 was donated to the museum. Also of interest was a 75 squadron Mirage fighter that was recovered many years later after flaming out circa 1985, just prior to FA18s came to DarwinB52 in the centre of the hanger with everything else around it
 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
			
		
		 
	So it seems that at Qantas, anything with an A and a J in its name was a shocker??Interesting that they’re stripping the paint of OJA at HARS. Getting that repainted will be an interesting exercise.
I never greatly liked that aircraft, as it had flight controls that were quite a bit heavier (in roll) than the rest of the fleet. I had a bit of vendetta against aircraft that were set up that way, but the management response was that the loadings were within the Boeing limits, so it was acceptable. BA on the other hand (as seen on their 767s that we had) set a much finer tolerance for control column loads, thus making the aircraft more or less the same. Different loads make them harder to control, especially in the flare on windy (x-wind) days, when your feel is a big part of the input. Over on the 767 fleet, EAJ, was also a shocker.












 
				