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The United States Air Force Museum Is A Must See Visit
The United States Air Force Museum Air Force museum is the world's biggest military museum of aviation as well as the national museum of the U. S. Air Force. It is the ongoing mission of the U. S. Air Force to present its history as well as its evolving capabilities.
An attraction known internationally, the Air Force museum explains the long history of manned flight.
Featuring over 300 aircraft and as well as assorted aerospace vehicles, the huge museum greets 1. 2 million visitors every year to view its 17 acres of indoor presentations of air and space.
Connecting the era of the Wright brothers to today's modern Space Age, the museum features a variety of gallery exhibits.
The museum employs sensory exhibits, to tell the Air Force story as well as educational programs and many special events.
The Air Force also observes its men and women, highlighting such virtues as duty, innovation, and courage.
The Air force museum is located in the town where the Wright brothers lived and invented the airplane; Dayton, Ohio.
The displays are housed in four massive hangars at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, located in Dayton. The museum, whenever in Dayton, is something you must see.
Even if you just have a slight interest in aircraft, NASA, or the military, you will certainly have a wonderful time. A visitor with a strong interest in aviation can easily spend two days exploring the vast museum.
And since there is no charge for admission, you will not beat the price.
From every era in aviation history, starting with the first bi-planes, there are all classifications of airplanes displayed.
The museum uses both chronological and subjective displays to tell the arousing story of years of aviation development.
Exhibits there include aircraft and missiles, the Stealth fighter, the SR-71 super spy-plane as well as the X-15, which is history's highest and fastest flying aircraft.
The museum also has personal Air Force artifacts including memorabilia like uniforms and photographs among the thousands of items on display.
An exhibit devoted to Prisoner of War history is one of the most popular at the museum.
This display features everything from homemade mousetraps to fitness exercise equipment that was fabricated by the prisoners in WWII prison camps.
Around the museum you can also see Harley-Davidson motorcycles, bugles and cooking utensils that were once used by the Air Force.
If a 5 piece drum set or an Ibanez acoustic electric guitar had ever been used by our Air Force, they certainly would have them here.
This excellent museum is an immensely interesting scene to visit and a wonderful experience for everyone in the family.
does the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) have the authority to ground a type of aircraft?
EASA has a legal and moral obligation to get to the bottom of this problem now. If there is a defective system and the aircraft is unsafe then it should be grounded,” said James Healy-Pratt of Stewarts Law in London.
EASA sets airworthiness standards for its member states. It doesn't have the authority to ground aircraft itself, but it can recommend this to member-state aviation authorities, and also, since it controls standards that the member states apply, it can effectively exclude a given type of aircraft from being certified airworthy.
EASA also authorizes non-European countries to operate aircraft in the EU (again via local or other European authorities for enforcement), which allows it to effectively ban specific airlines or individual aircraft that don't meet its standards.
EASA is supposed to replace JAA; I'm not sure what the state of that transition is.
Everything about European bureaucracy is hopelessly bloated and complicated, so there are probably errors somewhere in the description above.
FAA: Laser Incidents Increasingly Common (Aero News)
Phoenix Holds Unwelcome Distinction As Laser Attack Capital Of US The state of
Arizona is a great place for aviation. Lots of sunshine and VFR, a thriving
Embry-Riddle campus - but the state capital also happens to lead the nation in
boneheads with lasers pointing them at aircraft. Phoenix ranks first so far in
2011 with 96 reports through October 20. Philadelphia is a close second at 95,
with Chicago third at 83.
Oliver Aircraft Hexplane VTOL concept
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