RAF Marham Victor to be scrapped

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He edited it last Friday! What did it say BEFORE he did so?
 
Couldn't something similar be done with the Victor. It would help keep its memory alive with the unwashed masses

Would be nice. There used to be a Buccaneer outside a service station in the north of Scotland, dunno if it's still there though. Problem with the Victor, or any airframe is moving it. That's where the cost is. It's not just looking after it in situ, which is why the RAF want to dispose of it, but moving it involves dismantling it, putting it on vehicles and transporting it down narrow country roads and through tiny villages designed for horses and carts, not aircraft moving vehicles - RAF bases are always located near quaint villages with fricken narrow roads!
 
And even if the costs of dismantling, transport and re-assembly can be covered, there could be restrictions which would prevent a move - Abnormal Load restrictions, low power lines on part of the route, bridge weight limits etc etc.
 
This picture gives you an idea of what you're dealing with. This was taken by a friend of mine in Scotland when the Concorde G-BOAA was being moved to the Scottish aviation museum in East Lothian. There was no way the Concorde could have made that bend, so it was towed across the adjacent farmer's field. It had begun its journey at Heathrow by road to the Thames, was loaded on a barge, towed through the centre of London and into the Channel, from where it went up the UK coast, docking at Torness nuclear power station, loaded onto the transporters and taken via these roads and fields to East Fortune.

G-BOAAElothian

1807 National Museum of Flight East Fortune G-BOAA
 
I read in Air Classics magazine many years ago that the "Memphis Belle" was part of a gas station. I haven't thought of it in years. On to Wikipedia to see if that's so. Stop laughing.
 

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