The South Riding RV Travels

89

July 15th - Seattle WA - Museum of Flight Museums

Heading south from Seattle toward Tacoma, just north of the SeaTac airport,  we found the Museum of Flight. There were a number of aircraft parked outside including this US made Harrier. This was one the marines hadn't bent.
Inside were all sorts of aircraft including this replica of the original Wright brothers' plane. Three replicas have been made which are absolutely faithful to the original details and this one is the third. In the background is a ubiquitous DC3 (surely an icon of flight) and the Gossamer Albatross which was the first man-powered flight.
A centrepiece of the main display area was this SR71 Blackbird which was used as a spy plane. It flew at Mach 3 at which point all sorts of awkward things start happening to surfaces and materials. Hence the peculiar shape.
This was a well laid out display as shots like this show. The planes weren't always the most obvious since they have been gathered from various other collections. The one in the foreground here is a Northrop YF5A jet.
This is a Stinson seaplane, not a name I'd heard before but then I'd not seen many seaplanes before either. But we have seen them in the skies and even landing at this airport whilst we were there..
This was also a Stinson. I just picked it because the angle and colour were good. This has a radial engine.
This is one of the more famous warplanes being a Phantom F4C fighter bomber. Almost an icon..
Besides the main display area, there were two other areas covering the two World wars. This was a Curtiss Warbird with the paintjob just like in the movies.
This was a Sopwith Triplane from the first World War. Not as well known as the Fokker which was flown by Baron von Richthofen. The Sopwiths were good solid English warplanes although the triplane was not a major player.
There was also a small section of the museum devoted to the Apollo manned missions. This was a lunar capsule complete with a dummy crew.
There were a number of outside exhibits including a Concorde and this, the first Boeing 747, number 001, built in 1966. Amazing that they are still building them today almost 40 years later.
Another of the outside exhibits was this former presidential aircraft (Air Force One). This one was used by Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Carter (and Henry Kissinger). There were queues for both this and the Concorde but we've been inside a Concorde.
We found it more interesting to watch the planes landing and taking off from the airport. They ranged from this barnstormer which gave flights and landed on a sixpence through a number of quite noisy Lear jets.
Next door was another Boeing factory which was obviously connected to the AWACs. You can just see the characteristic aerial behind the fence. I think the plane in the foreground is a modern variat..