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Thanks. I will check out the Science Museum to see those, thanks.The "Jack the Ripper" walking tour is excellent if you're interested in crime history.. Also recommend the Science Museum if only to see the Supermarine S.6 and the Schneider Trophy. That said, Allcock and Brown's Vickers Vimy and Amy Johnson's Gypsy Moth are always worth a look, as is the last fabric-winged Hurricane in the world. That said, the lighting in there isn't great for photography and some of the aircraft are tricky to see properly.
Natural History Museum
British Museum
Victoria and Albert Museum
It was there. If you look at the photo of the Hawker Hart you can just see the P-47's nose beneath the overhead aircraft's wing.
Not that Tempest. They had an earlier Sabre-powered Tempest on display.Ah thanks, the next question is, did you see the Tempest elsewhere in the museum that sat where the P-47 is now?
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The V&A has the Tippo Sultan's mechanical tiger. Any fan of Cornwell's Sharpe series will be impressed. That was the main purpose of my visit.So, your wife dragged you through the V&A and the Natural History Museum and you didn't go look at the pwetty aeroplanes at the Science Museum next door?
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Snap! Just read the post above. do go to the Science Museum. The V&A, whilst nice is no match for a Spitfire, Hurricane and an Me 163 (not to mention all the other good stuff).
The gondola of the R-33 is really cool. That is how one should navigate the ether. From the bridge of one's airship.Ah thanks, the next question is, did you see the Tempest elsewhere in the museum that sat where the P-47 is now?
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Not that Tempest. They had an earlier Sabre-powered Tempest on display.
The V&A has the Tippo Sultan's mechanical tiger.
It is interesting that London doesn't really have a museum celebrating the British Empire.
There is one at Rockcliffe, Ontario as part of the National Aviation Museum, but it's been undergoing restoration for some years. TF.X RD867 is a former RAF Museum aircraft that was presented to the Canadians.
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Not presented. Supplied in exchange for the FLYING Lysander the Canadians had. And the Beaufighter was missing many parts. The CNAC staff were far from impressed.
This became important later when the Canadians traded their Lysander, "the last in the world," to the British for a B-24 brought back from India.
It was my recollection from various Av mags at the time that India sold 24 B-24s that had been used as mechanic training aircraft.
I can add pics to the thread I started.
There were a number of ex Indian Air Force B-24s sold/traded to museums all over the place in 71/72 and probably later. The first one to the US was obtained by Rhodes Arnold for the Pima County museum. I think it was Dave Tallichet's one (Yesterdays Air Force) that flew through Tel Aviv the first day of the Yom Kippur war en-route to the UK where it wintered before flying to California. Pretty tense even though the tail was carrying the largest US flag they could paint on each side. That naturally was pure coincidence that they had done that.It was my recollection from various Av mags at the time that India sold 24 B-24s that had been used as mechanic training aircraft. I think Kermit Week's B-24 is one of these but he did not directly get it from India. If I can ever get a reliable desktop computer going and finally set up my slide scanner, I can add pics to the thread I started.
The Beaufighter at the Canadian Aviation and Space Museum was a straight trade with the RAF for a Canadian Bollingbroke.
The Tempest above was a ceiling hangar at Hendon in 2015 when I was there.