When I was a kid 1972ish, we lived in Dayton, my dad worked for NCR. We would go to that museum all the time. Back then, I think it was basically a couple of huge hangars. Had to be huge to hold the B-36, I'll never forget it.
I specifically took vacation to see this museum from Boston back in Dec. It's incredible and worth the visit. I spent 2 solid days looking at everything there. As a USAF veteran it's just....awesome.
I'm a native of Pensacola so I've watched the National Naval Aviation Museum grow from being little more than an unused WWII training building to the fantastic structure it currently is (though presently closed except to vets and active duty military), but it's CLEAR to me now that I'm going to have to make a special trip to Dayton, Ohio, to see this aviation masterpiece. These two museums together ought to make every American proud to be American, and help you sleep well at night knowing your air forces are awake and ready. Excellent video ... and SPECIAL thanks to EVERYONE who had a hand in restoring all this stuff, creating, and upgrading the museum! All very neat and clean.
We are one in the same, I haven’t seen to much of the museums growth, but I slightly remember when the missile gallery was added, and I went to the grand opening of the newest building and go all the time to see all the new stuff being add to the museum. I hope to one day make it down to the Naval Museum in Pensacola to get to experience it’s wonders
Thanks a lot! I had an incredible time visiting the Airforce Museum. The exhibits were fascinating and the entire experience was well organized. The dedication and the passion of the staff were evident, making it memorable and educational day. Thank you for maintaining such a remarkable institution that showcases the rich history of the U.S. Air Force.
I grew up and Dayton and went on like 10 field trips to this place, I’m now 31 and I can just now appreciate how lucky I am to be so close to such an awesome museum.
i've been there may be ~10 years ago and it was great! on the way back to my town after meeting at WPAFB, just stopped by and it couldl't be just stopped by. went through whole sections for ~3 h and all sections are impressive. saw two old veterans in Korean war section who seemed particpated in the war, and kind of sneak their experiences. wanna be there again!!
Ive been here dozens of times, its amazing to see just how much theyve upgraded it in the last 15~ years ive been to this place. Also feels kinda weird seeing my hometown on youtube. Keep up the good work!
Exelente video gracias por compartirlo y darnos la oportunidad de conocer este gran museo a las personas que no tenemos la posibilidad de viajar y visitarlo
Great place.i visited this museum 2 yrs ago.i really enjoyed watching the first airplane engines which where all mostly same brand engines as cars.italian,german and American
Just a note to those who have never been here. If you like to read everything in a museum, and possibly even if you don't. You may want to plan this as a two - or three day trip. This is big. There is outside displays not shown here, and I know there used to be other buildings that you take a shuttle bus to located elsewhere on the base.
They added a fourth, $40 million hanger a few years ago and moved all of the Presidential aircraft from the former location that used the shuttle....so the shuttle location is no longer a part of the museum.
@mattthornton8474 they used to also have a restoration hanger you could visit. Not just the old one that they moved the planes from when new large hanger was built.
I am so old, I remember seeing "Strawberry Bitch" sitting outside like all the aircraft did many, many, many years ago. Been here many times, my hometown.
Did you ever read the story about the pilot who had his kids picture taken in front of his airplane? They didn’t look very happy and when he asked why. They told him that they didn’t like being in front of the lady with “No clothes on “. It’s in one of the old museum magazines.
Thanks so much for the tour. I'm retired USAF. I still remember some of those plane's that were flying back then. I was station at Norton AFB, CA. ( 1980-88 ) and use to watch the C-141 Star Lifters fly in and out daily at Norton. Loved that cargo plane. I even got to ride in one once. This is one place on my bucket list I'm going to visit soon. Good video. Thanks.
I have visited the NASM both in DC and Chantilly VA , the Pensacola Naval Aviation Museum in Florida, the Marines Miramar museum, the USS Midway and the San Diego Air and space museum in California. Even visited the experimental aircraft association museum in Oshkosh. My next trip to the US, if any, will include Dayton.
Brings back fond (and not so fond) memories of working on the F-105, F-4, F16, T-38, T37, C-130, and many others as an Aircraft Instrument and finally an Insturment and Flight Control Systems Specialist. What a tour of 20 years. And I'd do it all over. My only critique would be the lack of the Aircraft Type "floating" under the aircraft, so we'd know the unfamiliar birds we're lookin' at. As someone below mentioned, I'd probably enter the museum and never come back out!
Grew up just outside Dayton, used to go a few times a year, it’s awesome. It’s also a LOT better now than it was in the 70’s & 80’s, the nukes are incredible to see. Oh, and it’s free. While there go to Carrilon Park where they have the Wright Cycle shop. Might as well head to downtown Dayton and see the original spot of the shop. After that head to Wright Pat, park off the runway and watch flights come & go. The first thing most of us did after getting our license was to do just that.
Great job! Was that your little boy or grandson? Cute kid standing at parade rest in front of the cars . Bet he was ready for nap time when he got back to the car. Anyway thanks again looks like they have changed the K-9 display around a little bit. Looks better. I hope to go back again . I need to check up on the Bob Hope display.
9:45 now that is my favorite World War II plane of all time the infamous P40E Warhawk most famously flown by the flying tigers of China we have one in working order in north central Texas. That’s flown during air shows along side to fighter, jets an F-16 and an F-22 and a P-51 mustang
I flew in the Navy version of the EX-121K show at the museum. The Navy has a number of squadrons of EC-121Ks in Guam, Barbers Point, Hawaii, Argentia, Newfoundland, Spain, etc. I was a radarman in the back of the aircraft. I flew in AEWBARRONPAC and VW-11 from 1960 to 1963.
30:09 My Dad actually flew that C-130. We were walking around it one day with my kids and he said "I may have flown this plane." Then he looked at the tail and said "I have definitely flown this plane." My sons and I (and a few bystanders) were duely impressed.
My college aeronautics professor was a retired Colonel, a few of us went with him to the Pima museum one weekend and walking around to the C-124 he looked close at it and said he thought he had flown this one. Turns out that the tail number was in his logbook for over a dozen trips to Vietnam. I haven't been to the museum in Dayton since '70 or '71, the larger aircraft were all parked outside along with the missiles.
Has anyone else noticed looking at the crews leather flight jackets there on display. Just how small they seem to be compared to other people walking around? I’ve been there a few times. My Father was in for 20+ years. He had a few good stories about the display’s and such. He was aircraft maintenance. Thanks to everyone who keeps those memories alive. There was a party there titled Bombers and Beer. I would have gave anything just to walk around and listen to the stories.
One time at the Oshkosh Air Show I saw a military seaplane that had been restored. Turns out the owner had purchased it down at the Boneyard in arizona. It was the same airplane he had been the crew chief on when he was in the military. What are the odds of that? He must have had a pretty good job as civilian life to be able to purchase that plane restored and fly it, more power to him!
Wow the museum has changed very nicely since I was last there in 1988 . I did a project for my black and white photography class and shot a lot of these aircraft using a Minolta 35 mm film camera with 400 speed black and white film I used a tripod and no flash.and got some great shots I ended up getting a A on the project (a good friend of mine went with me and later on told me that there was an airman following us the whole time we were there keeping an eye on what we where up too.)
Well filmed with sufficient time spent on each subject to take in what you are looking at. An absolutely wonderful museum for the aircraft enthusiast and no doubt could spend the best part of the day wondering about viewing all the exhibits. My particular favourite was at 24min 5 sec. the Sabre with all the fuselage skin removed showing all the detail of the aircraft. Great video and thanks for uploading it. By the way I presume the cute little boy who keeps popping up in the video is your own son.
Great video Varma, I grew up at WPAFB in the 80's to 1995 when my dad retired from the Air Force, I remember going to this museum a couple times back when they only had two of those large, curved roof buildings, glad to see they added two more and a rocket building... BUT... they clearly need to add a fifth giant curved roof building, to fill it with military helicopters all the way up to the current lineup that all the military branches have used, I was in the Army from '02-'06 as an aircraft re-fueler, re-fueled Army UH-60's, AH-64's, OH-58D's, CH-47's, Marine CH-53's, CH-46's, AH-1's, UH-1's, Air Force C-130's, plus Sherpa's and US Army UH-1's in Egypt with the Multinational Force & Observers.
Holy smokes Glenn. I‘d like to know what you do to relax? I wouldn’t be surprised to hear it’s restore old cars . Since you worked on so many choppers. I heard a little joke awhile back that you might like. Here’s hoping that you haven’t heard it before. In the Air Force there called Helicopters, in the Army its choppers. Navy it’s Helo’s . The Marine’s …oooh look!!!.
We here at Torrance Ca. have the only other Northrop YF-23 prototype. The F-22 won the competition. Northrop was based at Hawthorne airport (SpaceX took over much of the site now for Falcon 9 production) next door to Torrance. We hope to have a large enough hanger museum to keep it and other fighter indoors soon.
I really enjoyed watching this video because I like aviation so much and I'm on course for a commercial Pilot Licence. I love military and civil aircraft so much. .... .
Trying to figure out the disclaimer at the beginning. How would anything shown in this video hurt or upset someone? This museum is phenomenal, now comprised of 4 ginormous hangars, with a fifth one in the pipeline, so I heard. Definitely worth a visit, and it’s free of charge.
Wow! You did an amazing video job here. Imagine all the man hours and imagination it took to complete this enormous display!! Thank you for giving us this opportunity to see this museum.
I've seen that same F-86 at the AF Museum. Typical engineering, if there's the smallest space left, we fill it with the biggest piece of equipment we can find. I worked some early C-130A models, you had to know each one by serial number as they added my nav system and each one got added in a different place. Best fighter to work on, the Thud, everything behind drop-down panels easy to work on. Phantoms, not so easy, they hid my system under the side control panels or down in the foot well, you took a nosedive headfirst to get to the computer. To get to either the main black box, or the stable platform, that required getting the Egress people out and pulling the ejection seat. It was fun ... when I was young, wouldn't want to work on them now, much older.
Glad you liked it. I'm wondering if they're any better with the newest aircraft, or did they create the same problems? Anyone out there working Avionics on F-15s? I was INS.
Wow. Interesting. Did not know Dayton had a Air Force Museum. I am from Dayton and we do not have a military museum, There is one at 1100 Spaatz St, Wright Patterson AFB, OH 45433. Not Dayton, its in Riverside Ohio nearest city. Still A nice place
Google is Wrong. Not in Dayton. In fact its around 9 miles from there. Its like calling the Fairborn Peace accords the Dayton Peace Accords. They happened on the base at the Hope Hotel. I should know I from the area and work on base
@@charlesrice7701 The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force is located in Riverside, just under a half mile south of the Dayton border which paralells the Mad River. I'm not sure where you came up with "9 miles", but it's 4.5 miles (per gmap pedometer), as the crow flies, from the museum to Third and Main Streets in downtown Dayton. To someone from California, Arizona, etc., Riverside is essentially "Dayton", as it is considered a part of the Dayton metropolitan area.
They had some Iraqi Migs there when I went mid 2000s with son's Boy Scout troop. We camped off base and took the tour . I hadn't been there since 1974. There were B-52s taking off and landing. Unbelievably loud and impressive back then.
1946 designed double jet engine , double real rudder, nose like A10, with a canon in the middle surrounded by 5 machine guns , thought only this kind of plane able to win the internal war , only in picture one after one to make internal happy, as a mid school kid, if in the States possible some one could develop my way of thinking
19:05 MiG - 21 - the killer of Phantoms F-4. The rivalry between the American "Phantoms" and the MiG-21 in the sky of Vietnam ended in the defeat of the American fighter. Over the entire period of the war, American pilots managed to shoot down only 54 MiG-21 aircraft, and the MiG-21 managed to destroy more than 100 Phantoms. Moreover, the loss of an American aircraft, as a rule, was accompanied by the death of crew members, and the fighter itself cost the American people a significant amount, which was several times higher than the cost of the MiG.
Hello All, NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE USAF, DAYTON, OHIO CELEBRATES ITS 100TH ANNIVERSARY IN 2023. I created a poll on this event. Please checkout my channel and participate in the poll if you wish to watch latest video of the museum. Poll event link given below. Thank you! www.youtube.com/@varmasworld55/community
I am an Air Force Veteran. You didn't show the plane with the most unique history, the Corn Field Bomber. The F-106 Delta Dart. The ONLY time the Air Force had a pilot eject and they AF got both the pilot and plane back! The Museum has a video of the pilot in front of the F-106 talking about that day and when he got to fly the Corn Field Bomber again! That airplane and I were both stationed at Griffiss AFB, Rome, NY at the same time. It has taken me many trips to the Museum to fully see the museum. I strongly recommend at least FOUR DAYS! This video just barely touches all the history that is on display. Sadly, so many truly historic aircraft were scrapped. Two historic prototypes not saved are the XB-35 and YB-49 flying wings. The Memphis Bell was only saved by accident. If not for the City of Memphis after the war, the Bell would have been scrapped too. After the Korean War started, captured Japanese planes earmarked for a future museum were just became landfill for O'Hare Airport when the building was needed to build more airplanes for Korea. Sickening! I wish I could be with you when you go again. I have learned so much of the history behind the planes. If those planes could only talk, it would take months to tour the museum!
These all seen in 1930s popular science , mechanics , life , !onden News , many air plane , air model magazines from my fathers collection , spending whole afternoon studying the structure of different ail plane early bombers , later German plane fron German publivation, when under control , was first one with others to air port to welcome USA officers and KMT soldiers in 大塲air port Shanghai not seen Hook exported to China brought by Dolittle to Shanghailater by brothers airplane and model megazine , building model understanding more about structure of different fighting plane , F14 was made in 2000,,,,,,,,
Great museum, but all this old and modern technology, the USA has never won a war outside of the USA, failed in every war 20 years in Vietnam 20 years in Afghanistan, then Syria, Iraq all failed .
You MUST be trolling… But in case you’re not, please go to 13:34 in the video to see the American bomber that dropped the second, and last nuclear bomb ever used on August 9, 1945 which brought the unconditional surrender of the Empire of Japan, and US victory in WW2. Also: WWI, the Spanish-American War, and a large number of punitive expeditions would like to have a word. Regarding Iraq/Afghanistan/Vietnam..don’t confuse political failure with military/strategic failure. Invading Afghanistan, holding it for 20 years and leaving at a time of your choosing is hardly getting your butt kicked, or losing a war. It’s more like losing interest.
@Bored Operator USA butt was kicked in Vietnam, Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Somalia, Cuba, In WW2 USA was two years late , Russia took Berlin, England, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, plus dozens of other countries won over the Germans Russia took the most casualties. USA only took its revenge on Japan for what Japan did in Pearl Harbour. Watching the pull out and final defeat of USA forces in Vietnam and Afghanistan was the most( a complete failure) by government and USA military forces . I'm not a troll , just telling the true facts you know they are true ,
@@mysterycambodia but we are still here and one of the most powerful countries period. You can say we are a failure the day a new flag flys over our land till then. 🤐. Even then we have more guns then people we won’t go down without a bloody fight 🇺🇸
@Neo Overby With 10.000/15.000 crossing the border each day from Mexico, El Salvador,Columbia, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Uruguay plus the other South American countries USA will be out numbered within 10+ years by 2035/2050 you will be no longer USA citizens they will end up ruling USA and running the country there way not yours
Having not seen double bodies p51, or P 70 or 77, saw by eyes after August 15, 1945, jap surrendered ,sparkling B29, With P77, both so sparkling flying over the blue sky of Shanghai, Do not think anyone would afford you this segment of history
Having not seen double bodies p51, or P 70 or 77, saw by eyes after August 15, 1945, jap surrendered ,sparkling B29, With P77, both so sparkling flying over the blue sky of Shanghai, Do not think anyone would afford you this segment of hustory
When I was a kid 1972ish, we lived in Dayton, my dad worked for NCR. We would go to that museum all the time. Back then, I think it was basically a couple of huge hangars. Had to be huge to hold the B-36, I'll never forget it.
I specifically took vacation to see this museum from Boston back in Dec. It's incredible and worth the visit. I spent 2 solid days looking at everything there. As a USAF veteran it's just....awesome.
Thank you!
I tell everyone while you can still walk all day go see the Dayton museum. Amazing place.
its not in dayton
It’s 6 miles NE of Dayton Ohio.
Close enough for me.
I lasted about 5 hours, so much to see.... next time
I'm a native of Pensacola so I've watched the National Naval Aviation Museum grow from being little more than an unused WWII training building to the fantastic structure it currently is (though presently closed except to vets and active duty military), but it's CLEAR to me now that I'm going to have to make a special trip to Dayton, Ohio, to see this aviation masterpiece. These two museums together ought to make every American proud to be American, and help you sleep well at night knowing your air forces are awake and ready. Excellent video ... and SPECIAL thanks to EVERYONE who had a hand in restoring all this stuff, creating, and upgrading the museum! All very neat and clean.
We are one in the same, I haven’t seen to much of the museums growth, but I slightly remember when the missile gallery was added, and I went to the grand opening of the newest building and go all the time to see all the new stuff being add to the museum. I hope to one day make it down to the Naval Museum in Pensacola to get to experience it’s wonders
Thanks so much for the visit and taking all the video!!!
Thanks a lot! I had an incredible time visiting the Airforce Museum. The exhibits were fascinating and the entire experience was well organized. The dedication and the passion of the staff were evident, making it memorable and educational day. Thank you for maintaining such a remarkable institution that showcases the rich history of the U.S. Air Force.
I've only been there once and surely would love to go back. Thanks!
Great video. I will Definitely go some day
Thank you!
OUTSTANDING. Thank you for this video.
Thank you! I’m glad you liked this video!
Thanks to the museum for allowing this ..................................
The Ohka trainer there is most exceptionally rare. Love that museum.
I grew up and Dayton and went on like 10 field trips to this place, I’m now 31 and I can just now appreciate how lucky I am to be so close to such an awesome museum.
Congratulations , perfect video and audio.i amazin
Thank you! I’m glad you liked the video!
I visited that place in 2014 and now I want to go back in 2023.
Fascinating. Thank you.
Thank you!
Super vidéo, merci
Thank you!
Amazing!✈️.. thanks from NZ 👍🇳🇿
Thank you!
Somewhere I always wanted to visit !
Very well done!! I haven’t been back to the museum or to Wright Pat since 1994 when I retired. Enjoyed seeing what things look like now. Thank you 🙏
Thank you!
Very good video, we went this summer good times
Thank you!
I am lucky to live here in Ohio and the museum is only 15 minutes away and I have visited it many times and it is great
i've been there may be ~10 years ago and it was great! on the way back to my town after meeting at WPAFB, just stopped by and it couldl't be just stopped by. went through whole sections for ~3 h and all sections are impressive. saw two old veterans in Korean war section who seemed particpated in the war, and kind of sneak their experiences. wanna be there again!!
Ive been here dozens of times, its amazing to see just how much theyve upgraded it in the last 15~ years ive been to this place. Also feels kinda weird seeing my hometown on youtube. Keep up the good work!
I know right! Fellow Daytonian here 👋🏼👋🏼🙂
I drive by it everyday and shop at the Krogers on spinning rd.....
Exelente video gracias por compartirlo y darnos la oportunidad de conocer este gran museo a las personas que no tenemos la posibilidad de viajar y visitarlo
That Herc is one my old planes. Good to see they finally moved her inside. Great coverage and camera work.
If I lived in Dayton I’d volunteer there. Wonderful museum.I’ve been there 3 times,coming from Dallas.
Great place.i visited this museum 2 yrs ago.i really enjoyed watching the first airplane engines which where all mostly same brand engines as cars.italian,german and American
Thank you for the walk through.
Was there 15 years ago with my son.
28:55 your only shot of the only XB-70 in existence.
Thank you!
I have been here but a number of years ago. What an improvement! Will have to return.
Things of beauty
The B-36 there is tremendous...always thought that was just and updated B-29, but its not, its enormous!.....like a Super Duper Fortress!
This video makes me want to visit even more. Hope I get there before I die. It's changed a lot since my last visit in 1968.
I’m glad you liked this video! Happy new year.
Just a note to those who have never been here. If you like to read everything in a museum, and possibly even if you don't. You may want to plan this as a two - or three day trip. This is big. There is outside displays not shown here, and I know there used to be other buildings that you take a shuttle bus to located elsewhere on the base.
They added a fourth, $40 million hanger a few years ago and moved all of the Presidential aircraft from the former location that used the shuttle....so the shuttle location is no longer a part of the museum.
@mattthornton8474 they used to also have a restoration hanger you could visit. Not just the old one that they moved the planes from when new large hanger was built.
Exactly what I said. I only had a couple of hours but needed a couple of days!
At least 3 days we did 4 days (January 28-feb 2) of this year
I visited here once and only had a couple of hours when I needed a couple of days. Fantastic!
I am so old, I remember seeing "Strawberry Bitch" sitting outside like all the aircraft did many, many, many years ago.
Been here many times, my hometown.
Did you ever read the story about the pilot who had his kids picture taken in front of his airplane? They didn’t look very happy and when he asked why. They told him that they didn’t like being in front of the lady with “No clothes on “.
It’s in one of the old museum magazines.
Beautiful
Thank you!
Thanks for this. Just made me add another one to the must see list.
Thank you!
I have lived 45 minutes from AF Museum most of my life and it was a Field trip destination throughout school. Awesome place!
Thanks so much for the tour. I'm retired USAF. I still remember some of those plane's that were flying back then. I was station at Norton AFB, CA. ( 1980-88 ) and use to watch the C-141 Star Lifters fly in and out daily at Norton. Loved that cargo plane. I even got to ride in one once. This is one place on my bucket list I'm going to visit soon. Good video. Thanks.
Thank you!
Thank you for this video. Great work.
Thank you!
I'm lucky. Live 30 minutes away, and have been there many times. Awesome place to visit
I live 15 minutes away.
Been there several times over the decades; Thankfully most of the outside planes were moved inside.
Great video , I just subscribed to your channel!!!
Thank you!
I have visited the NASM both in DC and Chantilly VA , the Pensacola Naval Aviation Museum in Florida, the Marines Miramar museum, the USS Midway and the San Diego Air and space museum in California. Even visited the experimental aircraft association museum in Oshkosh. My next trip to the US, if any, will include Dayton.
I noticed that at big war, big and good stuffs came out.
Thanks very much. Enjoyed.
This has been on my bucket list for a while, and now I just got that bug to check and mark it off that list.
CAVU
It’s well worth going to. Comfortable shoes are a must. Easy to spend a full day. They do have chairs and benches all through to rest if needed.
@@markjenkins2054 Thanks for the information; well noted 🙂
Thinking will stop by this year right after Oshkosh.
CAVU
Brings back fond (and not so fond) memories of working on the F-105, F-4, F16, T-38, T37, C-130, and many others as an Aircraft Instrument and finally an Insturment and Flight Control Systems Specialist. What a tour of 20 years. And I'd do it all over. My only critique would be the lack of the Aircraft Type "floating" under the aircraft, so we'd know the unfamiliar birds we're lookin' at. As someone below mentioned, I'd probably enter the museum and never come back out!
Grew up just outside Dayton, used to go a few times a year, it’s awesome. It’s also a LOT better now than it was in the 70’s & 80’s, the nukes are incredible to see.
Oh, and it’s free.
While there go to Carrilon Park where they have the Wright Cycle shop. Might as well head to downtown Dayton and see the original spot of the shop. After that head to Wright Pat, park off the runway and watch flights come & go. The first thing most of us did after getting our license was to do just that.
Thanks for the info!
A totally different vibe than when I visited several times in the 1980's and 90's.
vibe of the time ............
I’ve been to the Air and Space Museum on the Mall in DC, here and the Pima Air and Space Museum South of Tucson. All are fantastic!
Great job! Was that your little boy or grandson? Cute kid standing at parade rest in front of the cars . Bet he was ready for nap time when he got back to the car. Anyway thanks again looks like they have changed the K-9 display around a little bit. Looks better. I hope to go back again . I need to check up on the Bob Hope display.
Thank you!
He is my son 🙂Not just a nap, it’s longer nap..
9:45 now that is my favorite World War II plane of all time the infamous P40E Warhawk most famously flown by the flying tigers of China we have one in working order in north central Texas. That’s flown during air shows along side to fighter, jets an F-16 and an F-22 and a P-51 mustang
Muchas gracias, una feliz Navidad desde el Peru!
Feliz Navidad 🎄
I flew in the Navy version of the EX-121K show at the museum. The Navy has a number of squadrons of EC-121Ks in Guam, Barbers Point, Hawaii, Argentia, Newfoundland, Spain, etc. I was a radarman in the back of the aircraft. I flew in AEWBARRONPAC and VW-11 from 1960 to 1963.
30:09 My Dad actually flew that C-130. We were walking around it one day with my kids and he said "I may have flown this plane." Then he looked at the tail and said "I have definitely flown this plane." My sons and I (and a few bystanders) were duely impressed.
Great! Huge respect to your father 🫡
My college aeronautics professor was a retired Colonel, a few of us went with him to the Pima museum one weekend and walking around to the C-124 he looked close at it and said he thought he had flown this one. Turns out that the tail number was in his logbook for over a dozen trips to Vietnam. I haven't been to the museum in Dayton since '70 or '71, the larger aircraft were all parked outside along with the missiles.
Has anyone else noticed looking at the crews leather flight jackets there on display. Just how small they seem to be compared to other people walking around? I’ve been there a few times. My Father was in for 20+ years. He had a few good stories about the display’s and such. He was aircraft maintenance. Thanks to everyone who keeps those memories alive. There was a party there titled Bombers and Beer. I would have gave anything just to walk around and listen to the stories.
One time at the Oshkosh Air Show I saw a military seaplane that had been restored. Turns out the owner had purchased it down at the Boneyard in arizona. It was the same airplane he had been the crew chief on when he was in the military. What are the odds of that? He must have had a pretty good job as civilian life to be able to purchase that plane restored and fly it, more power to him!
The museum is free and worth a trip at least one time.
Wow the museum has changed very nicely since I was last there in 1988 . I did a project for my black and white photography class and shot a lot of these aircraft using a Minolta 35 mm film camera with 400 speed black and white film I used a tripod and no flash.and got some great shots I ended up getting a A on the project (a good friend of mine went with me and later on told me that there was an airman following us the whole time we were there keeping an eye on what we where up too.)
Thanks for sharing your experience!
Hello viewers, pls subscribe and support my channel if you like my videos. It will motivate me to do more videos 🙂
Well filmed with sufficient time spent on each subject to take in what you are looking at. An absolutely wonderful museum for the aircraft enthusiast and no doubt could spend the best part of the day wondering about viewing all the exhibits. My particular favourite was at 24min 5 sec. the Sabre with all the fuselage skin removed showing all the detail of the aircraft. Great video and thanks for uploading it. By the way I presume the cute little boy who keeps popping up in the video is your own son.
Thank you! Yes, he is my son 🙂
La grandeza de una nación amante de la libertad y la democracia
I love your disclaimer, if only it was possible.
The train car at 12:58 was donated by SNCF to commemorate its use by the Germans to move POWs. Brought to W-P by the 439AW from Chateauroux, FR
Looks like a really wonderful museum! I hope to visit there someday.
Great video Varma, I grew up at WPAFB in the 80's to 1995 when my dad retired from the Air Force, I remember going to this museum a couple times back when they only had two of those large, curved roof buildings, glad to see they added two more and a rocket building... BUT... they clearly need to add a fifth giant curved roof building, to fill it with military helicopters all the way up to the current lineup that all the military branches have used, I was in the Army from '02-'06 as an aircraft re-fueler, re-fueled Army UH-60's, AH-64's, OH-58D's, CH-47's, Marine CH-53's, CH-46's, AH-1's, UH-1's, Air Force C-130's, plus Sherpa's and US Army UH-1's in Egypt with the Multinational Force & Observers.
Thank you!
Holy smokes Glenn. I‘d like to know what you do to relax? I wouldn’t be surprised to hear it’s restore old cars . Since you worked on so many choppers. I heard a little joke awhile back that you might like. Here’s hoping that you haven’t heard it before. In the Air Force there called Helicopters, in the Army its choppers. Navy it’s Helo’s . The Marine’s …oooh look!!!.
@@CSltz I've heard that style of joke before lol, I'm into model trains for relaxation.
Esse Museu e o Smithsonian National air and Space Museun em WDC são magníficos!!!
I drive 1.5 hours once a month to volunteer there. I always work the Early Years/WWII Gallery in the morning, and another in the afternoon.
my dad used to volunteer there ,,he passed in 2000 ...we live not far from there,,,
@@Monza62000 I'm starting my 3rd year volunteering. I volunteered at the Ohio State Fair for 25 yrs. Did Smokey Bear's voice for 21 yrs.
We here at Torrance Ca. have the only other Northrop YF-23 prototype. The F-22 won the competition. Northrop was based at Hawthorne airport (SpaceX took over much of the site now for Falcon 9 production) next door to Torrance. We hope to have a large enough hanger museum to keep it and other fighter indoors soon.
I really enjoyed watching this video because I like aviation so much and I'm on course for a commercial Pilot Licence. I love military and civil aircraft so much. .... .
Thank you!
It's a pleasure. Keep up the good work and God bless you all.With Kind Regards, Karl. ..... :-) .
Trying to figure out the disclaimer at the beginning. How would anything shown in this video hurt or upset someone? This museum is phenomenal, now comprised of 4 ginormous hangars, with a fifth one in the pipeline, so I heard. Definitely worth a visit, and it’s free of charge.
Wow! You did an amazing video job here. Imagine all the man hours and imagination it took to complete this enormous display!! Thank you for giving us this opportunity to see this museum.
I’m glad you liked this video!
Thanks for the compliment!
All work at the museum is done by volunteers nobody is paid to work at or for the museum, I do work at the museum and live 2 miles from the museum.
White Sands Missile Range has a number of early rockets on display including some V2 rockets that were tested after WW2 at White Sands.
In April they will add an Atlas rockets, and will return the LGM-118 payload bus.
Wright brothers looks like fun to me..............................................
Great video! May I ask where the music comes from? Love it!
Thanks! Music link in the video description
I've seen that same F-86 at the AF Museum. Typical engineering, if there's the smallest space left, we fill it with the biggest piece of equipment we can find. I worked some early C-130A models, you had to know each one by serial number as they added my nav system and each one got added in a different place. Best fighter to work on, the Thud, everything behind drop-down panels easy to work on. Phantoms, not so easy, they hid my system under the side control panels or down in the foot well, you took a nosedive headfirst to get to the computer. To get to either the main black box, or the stable platform, that required getting the Egress people out and pulling the ejection seat. It was fun ... when I was young, wouldn't want to work on them now, much older.
Glad you liked it. I'm wondering if they're any better with the newest aircraft, or did they create the same problems? Anyone out there working Avionics on F-15s? I was INS.
OH MY GOD SOMEBODY BRING ME HERE
When I last went, it was free admission. . . .it's almost always open. . . .and this video , as great as it is. . .doesn't shown half the stuff.
Wow. Interesting. Did not know Dayton had a Air Force Museum. I am from Dayton and we do not have a military museum, There is one at 1100 Spaatz St, Wright Patterson AFB, OH 45433. Not Dayton, its in Riverside Ohio nearest city. Still A nice place
This video is the same one at 1100 Spaatz st. Address was showing as Dayton in google.
Google is Wrong. Not in Dayton. In fact its around 9 miles from there. Its like calling the Fairborn Peace accords the Dayton Peace Accords. They happened on the base at the Hope Hotel. I should know I from the area and work on base
Thanks for the info!
@@charlesrice7701 The National Museum of the U.S. Air Force is located in Riverside, just under a half mile south of the Dayton border which paralells the Mad River. I'm not sure where you came up with "9 miles", but it's 4.5 miles (per gmap pedometer), as the crow flies, from the museum to Third and Main Streets in downtown Dayton.
To someone from California, Arizona, etc., Riverside is essentially "Dayton", as it is considered a part of the Dayton metropolitan area.
To someone from California or Arizona, for example, Riverside is essentially "Dayton", since it is indeed a part of the Dayton metropolitan area.
You won’t need to even like airplanes to enjoy this museum. Not to be missed.
They had some Iraqi Migs there when I went mid 2000s with son's Boy Scout troop. We camped off base and took the tour . I hadn't been there since 1974. There were B-52s taking off and landing. Unbelievably loud and impressive back then.
1946 designed double jet engine , double real rudder, nose like A10, with a canon in the middle surrounded by 5 machine guns , thought only this kind of plane able to win the internal war , only in picture one after one to make internal happy, as a mid school kid, if in the States possible some one could develop my way of thinking
вот это я понимаю, музей!
Esplêndido!
Thank you!
@@varmasworld55 what is the Enola Gay ?
Wonderful museum realy, but why in ane place we don't see something about our master of flight Sir Alberto Santos Dumont.
19:05 MiG - 21 - the killer of Phantoms F-4. The rivalry between the American "Phantoms" and the MiG-21 in the sky of Vietnam ended in the defeat of the American fighter. Over the entire period of the war, American pilots managed to shoot down only 54 MiG-21 aircraft, and the MiG-21 managed to destroy more than 100 Phantoms. Moreover, the loss of an American aircraft, as a rule, was accompanied by the death of crew members, and the fighter itself cost the American people a significant amount, which was several times higher than the cost of the MiG.
@@bobme1ga278 How old are you now? Are you a veteran, you must be 75 already?
Hello All,
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE USAF, DAYTON, OHIO CELEBRATES ITS 100TH ANNIVERSARY IN 2023.
I created a poll on this event. Please checkout my channel and participate in the poll if you wish to watch latest video of the museum.
Poll event link given below. Thank you!
www.youtube.com/@varmasworld55/community
Hard to see that YF-23 just sitting there when it should be serving our country.
I am an Air Force Veteran. You didn't show the plane with the most unique history, the Corn Field Bomber. The F-106 Delta Dart. The ONLY time the Air Force had a pilot eject and they AF got both the pilot and plane back! The Museum has a video of the pilot in front of the F-106 talking about that day and when he got to fly the Corn Field Bomber again! That airplane and I were both stationed at Griffiss AFB, Rome, NY at the same time.
It has taken me many trips to the Museum to fully see the museum. I strongly recommend at least FOUR DAYS! This video just barely touches all the history that is on display.
Sadly, so many truly historic aircraft were scrapped. Two historic prototypes not saved are the XB-35 and YB-49 flying wings.
The Memphis Bell was only saved by accident. If not for the City of Memphis after the war, the Bell would have been scrapped too.
After the Korean War started, captured Japanese planes earmarked for a future museum were just became landfill for O'Hare Airport when the building was needed to build more airplanes for Korea. Sickening!
I wish I could be with you when you go again. I have learned so much of the history behind the planes.
If those planes could only talk, it would take months to tour the museum!
Thanks for the information! I will surely take videos of the aircraft you mentioned when I visit the museum next time.
Greart never been would go in a sec.....................
We go about once a year .
Good video, but that disclaimer was to say the least interesting
These all seen in 1930s popular science , mechanics , life , !onden News , many air plane , air model magazines from my fathers collection , spending whole afternoon studying the structure of different ail plane early bombers , later German plane fron German publivation, when under control , was first one with others to air port to welcome USA officers and KMT soldiers in 大塲air port Shanghai not seen Hook exported to China brought by Dolittle to Shanghailater by brothers airplane and model megazine , building model understanding more about structure of different fighting plane , F14 was made in 2000,,,,,,,,
😛❤❤👍👍👍
Музей ввс сша?
А что там делает миГ 21?
И думается есть отдельный зал «12.апреля 1961 «года? Или «4 октября 1957»
Нет ?
Ай ай ай…
What is the Enola gay?
At the Smithsonian in DC
ok, tanks !❤️
Area 51 gift shop.
It's one boring museum
Great museum, but all this old and modern technology, the USA has never won a war outside of the USA, failed in every war 20 years in Vietnam 20 years in Afghanistan, then Syria, Iraq all failed .
You MUST be trolling…
But in case you’re not, please go to 13:34 in the video to see the American bomber that dropped the second, and last nuclear bomb ever used on August 9, 1945 which brought the unconditional surrender of the Empire of Japan, and US victory in WW2.
Also: WWI, the Spanish-American War, and a large number of punitive expeditions would like to have a word.
Regarding Iraq/Afghanistan/Vietnam..don’t confuse political failure with military/strategic failure. Invading Afghanistan, holding it for 20 years and leaving at a time of your choosing is hardly getting your butt kicked, or losing a war.
It’s more like losing interest.
@Bored Operator
USA butt was kicked in Vietnam, Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Somalia, Cuba,
In WW2 USA was two years late , Russia took Berlin, England, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, plus dozens of other countries won over the Germans Russia took the most casualties.
USA only took its revenge on Japan for what Japan did in Pearl Harbour.
Watching the pull out and final defeat of USA forces in Vietnam and Afghanistan was the most( a complete failure) by government and USA military forces .
I'm not a troll , just telling the true facts you know they are true ,
@@mysterycambodia but we are still here and one of the most powerful countries period. You can say we are a failure the day a new flag flys over our land till then. 🤐. Even then we have more guns then people we won’t go down without a bloody fight 🇺🇸
@Neo Overby
With 10.000/15.000 crossing the border each day from Mexico, El Salvador,Columbia, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Uruguay plus the other South American countries USA will be out numbered within 10+ years by 2035/2050 you will be no longer USA citizens they will end up ruling USA and running the country there way not yours
Communism sure hasn’t saved anyone or pulled anyone out of poverty. You deride us while using American technology.
Having not seen double bodies p51, or P 70 or 77, saw by eyes after August 15, 1945, jap surrendered ,sparkling B29, With P77, both so sparkling flying over the blue sky of Shanghai, Do not think anyone would afford you this segment of history
Incrível 👍🇧🇷🇺🇦🇺🇸
Having not seen double bodies p51, or P 70 or 77, saw by eyes after August 15, 1945, jap surrendered ,sparkling B29, With P77, both so sparkling flying over the blue sky of Shanghai, Do not think anyone would afford you this segment of hustory