28th September 2023
I sleep pretty well - for some reason, not turning off the light until just before midnight, despite being tired. I wake and see it's 0830 - and decide to have a slow start to the day, and so hit snooze. I'm not going far and want to avoid rush hour traffic...
The shower here is great - and I luxuriate under it for a long time, before completing my ablutions and getting dressed.
I'm out of the door at 0945 - to find that rush hour is far from over. Never mind, Waze does its stuff and I'm soon on the bewildering network of highways which, 20 minutes later, deposits me at the oddly-named East Marginal Way...
...which is home to...
The Boeing Corporation, and...
...
The Museum of Flight...
Fair warning - if you're not interested in aeroplanes, you might want to skip this episode, and have a cup of tea instead...
Outside the entrance is one of the most graceful-looking airliners ever designed - the Lockheed Constellation...
Right from the outset, and throughout the visit, I'm struck by the efforts to engage young people with the museum - and there are plenty of youngsters here - as well as a ton of old farts like me...
Hanging from the ceiling in the foyer are a number of reproductions of kites and gliders that preceded the first powered flight...
Stacey, one of the guides, gives me a rundown on where everything is. They do free guided tours, but I decide to wander at my own pace...
Straight away, there's a reproduction of the Wright Flyer - the first successful powered aircraft...
As well as aircraft, the museum houses ephemera from the early days of aviation - this is a wind tunnel the Wright brothers used to test designs...
This is a DeHavilland DH-4B - an early US Air Mail aircraft used in the 1920s...
The US Postal Service was instrumental in 'normalising' the concept of commercial air traffic...
This is a great space - light and airy, with exhibits everywhere you look...
The weird vertical thing is the
Gossamer Albatross - the first man-powered aircraft, which captured the Kremer prize in 1977 by flying a one-mile figure of eight course purely powered by human effort. The Gossamer Albatross Two then won a further Kremer prize in 1979 by crossing the English Channel, emulating
Louis Blériot's 1909 feat.
Interesting aircraft here. Not strictly a Blackbird (the YF-12A), but a predecessor - the A-11 - a single seater, designed initially as a fighter (though never deployed as such). It has a drone mounted on a dorsal pylon between the engines...
This place started out as the Boeing Museum, before expanding, so a lot of the exhibits are Boeing-centric...
...so they display this Boeing 80-A1, which was a contemporary of the more famous Ford Tri-Motor...
Boeing Model 100, from 1928...
Beautiful Stearman C-3B from 1927...
Overhead, in plenty of illustrious company, is a Beaver floatplane, used by 'bush' pilots the world over...
This is a reproduction of a Stinson Model O, from 1933 - unbelievably clean - like it had been polished this morning...
The Lockheed Electra - another great design. Most famous, sadly...
...for being
Amelia Earhart's aircraft when she went missing in the Pacific in 1937. Her statue waits on a park bench...
Taking a slight leap forward, this is the MiG 15 - the jet fighter that surprised the UN forces in Korea when it appeared...
...and, next to it, the F86 Sabre (this one's a CF-86 - built for Canada) from the same era. The opposing aircraft were surprisingly well-matched...
In a similar juxtaposition on the floor below, is a MiG-21, in Czech markings, and behind it...
...the F-4 Phantom - two opponents that met in the Vietnam war...
This is an experimental version of the Vought F-8 Crusader - like its production version, it has a system that allows the front of the wing to decouple from the fuselage to allow for higher angle of attack flight, during take-off and landing...
UH-1 Huey Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) helicopter. Used in their hundreds during the Vietnam conflict, they struggled to rescue aircrew who had ejected over jungle terrain (most of the land surface). The boffins designed this bit of kit...
By attaching this to the end of the winch cable, they could penetrate the tree cover, then the downed pilot could pull a lever, extending the fibreglass 'petals' to deploy and protect him from branches whilst being winched aboard...
There are a couple of cockpits which you can sit in - a Blackbird and an F-18E - and a queue of kids (of all ages

) waiting to give this a go...
I don't think I have been close to an SR-71 with its gear down before - what small wheels and odd-looking tyres...
The Taylor Aerocar...
For decades, entrepreneurs have been attempting to come up with a design for a flying car. Unfortunately - just like Taylor's (many) efforts, what you end up with is a poor car and a poor aircraft. The very nature of the two vehicles means that you are forever carting around whole systems that you don't need if you are flying, or don't need if you're driving...
Two cruise missiles - the
V1 and the
AGM-86 Air-Launched Cruise Missile, generations apart in technology, but less than 40 years difference in age...
https://missilethreat.csis.org/missile/alcm/
In a side display, there is a
Project Mercury capsule - it's
tiny...
Nearby, the USSR's first capsule -
Vostok...
...and next to it, a model of
Sputnik One, which triggered the Space Race...
I leave the greenhouse gallery and make my way to the Red Barn, which represents Boeing's first workshop and factory...
...which is laid out with displays of how Boeing engineers started building aeroplanes as a start-up...
I'm reminded of the workshops over at
Croydon Aviation Heritage Centre in New Zealand - these techniques and skills are still in use in the building and restoration of vintage and replica aircraft...
OK - that's the end of part one, otherwise I'll get told off for having too many pics per post...
More later...