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View Full Version : Hanger sale - get out yer checkbooks



cameraman
02-27-14, 01:32 PM
The Utah Aerospace Museum needs to make some room. 18 aircraft it can't handle are up for sale.

» Attack aircraft: A-7F (YA)

» Bomber: B-47E (WB)

» Fighter jets: F-4C (RF), F-4E, F-4E (GF), F/A-18A, F-86L, F-106A (QF),

» Training aircraft: T-28B, BUNO, T-39A (CT)

» Transport: C-131D, » C-130E, C-45H, C-119F, RCAF, C-7B, U-3A

» Helicopters: H-21C, H-13T


Release Number: 010214

2/27/2014 - HILL AIR FORCE BASE, Utah -- Nearly 30 years after opening its doors, the Hill Aerospace Museum is scaling back. The museum is reducing its collection by 18 aircraft, three missiles and a number of support vehicles.

Acting Museum Director Aaron Clark said it's a relatively small number in comparison to the more than 2,000 artifacts that currently sprawl the museum's 34-acres situated on Hill AFB's north side. He said the downsizing is necessary because "the museum no longer has the manpower, funding or means necessary to give these aircraft the care they need."

Over time, Clark said, these aircraft need restoration and repair in order to maintain their appearance and integrity.

"An outdoor static display aircraft routinely needs repainting every five-to-six years, with both small and large aircraft costing a significant amount," Clark said. For example, to repaint an F-4 Phantom in-house it could cost the base nearly $15,000. For larger airframes, such as the B-47E we have on our grounds, he said, it would cost the museum roughly $100,000 to repaint and restore.

Moving the aircraft will put the museum in a fiscally responsible position to oversee the remaining collection, but it will also allow the museum to refocus on its mission of reflecting the history of aviation as it pertains to Hill AFB and the state of Utah.

"Most of the aircraft slated to be cut from the museum's collection are those that have little if any ties to the history of the base or the state," Clark said. "However, a C-47 currently on display outside the museum will remain in the collection and is scheduled for restoration, because the aircraft has significant ties to the history of Hill."

Even with one aircraft already gone, museum goers shouldn't expect to see the rest of the museum's "excess list" to disappear overnight. The fate of those displays will be managed by the National Museum of the Air Force located at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio.

Clark said the artifacts will first be offered to field museums, base air parks, service museums and certified civilian museums around the country. Beyond that, they will be offered to veteran's organizations, hospitals and cities. Only as a last resort, Clark added, will the planes be scrapped.

Retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Kevin Sullivan, Chairman of the Aerospace Heritage Foundation of Utah -- a private entity that helps fund acquisition, restoration, and maintenance of museum static displays and exhibits -- is on board with the decision to downsize.

"While some of our regular visitors to the museum may be disappointed with the decision to excess a portion of the collection, we understand the fiscal challenges in trying to maintain the collection as it exists today and the rationale for downsizing," Sullivan said. "The Foundation will continue to work with the museum staff to provide quality displays, a comfortable environment, and a one-of-kind educational opportunity for our many visitors."

Who doesn't want one of these in their yard?

http://www.dhc-2.com/53-4256_B-47_Day-Glo_09091968_1280.jpg

Napoleon
02-27-14, 01:45 PM
How many B-47s are still in existence? Can't be many (I think Dayton has one).

Elmo T
02-27-14, 02:05 PM
Mighty 8th Air Force Museum in Georgia. We pass it on the way to Disney. ;)

There are a a few around:

Preserved B-47 variants on display and their location (http://b-47.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Preserved-B-47.pdf)

Napoleon
02-27-14, 02:33 PM
^^^

I never would have thought there were that many of them still around. Heck even MAPS at Akron Canton Airport has one.

Gnam
02-27-14, 03:03 PM
The Hiller Aviation Museum in the Bay Area is partial to helicopters. They might like the H-21C flying banana. :thumbup:


edit: just saw that a B-47 pilot will be speaking at the museum on March 8th

Flying the B-47 and B-52

Presented by
Lt. Col. William “Bill” Van Cleve (Ret)

http://www.hiller.org/b47.shtml