Planes, planes, and more planes…

Our friends, Al and Adrienne, picked up as about 10am and we headed over to the Pima Air and Space Museum.

Arriving at the museum, we found that the landscaping followed some of the planes inside.

First we have the Fishhook Barrel Cactus.

FishhookBarrelCactus

Next we have Saguaro Cactus.

SaguaroCactus

And then, of course, the Stealth Cactus!

StealthCactus

I guess you had to be there.

This is a BD-5J MicroJet, the world’s smallest jet plane. And it was a kit! BD5J

Another kit, Burt Rutan’s Long EZ.

LongEZ

The Starr Bumble Bee, the world’s smallest plane.

BumbleBee

The McCullough Super J-2 Gyrocopter

McCullochGyroCopter

The HoppiCopter. I’d really like one of these.

HoppiCopter

It’s a big leap to the SR-71 Blackbird, the fastest plane in the world.

SR71

The A-10 Warthog ground attack plane.

A10

A Beechcraft Bonanza. My uncle used to have one of these.

Bonanza

The Grumman F7F TigerCat.

F7FTigerCat

The B-52. This one is one of 2 configured to carry the X-15 aloft.

B52X15

This is the Douglas MB-1 Genie air to air missile. And it contained a NUCLEAR! warhead. It was to be launched into the middle of Russian bomber formations and take them all out at once.  Jan’s father used to work on these when he was in the Air Force. It’s amazing how small they can make an atomic bomb.

Genie

This is B-57 Canberra bomber. I used to work on these. I was amazed to find that it had BUICK! jet engines in it.  Who knew Buick even made jet engines.

B57

The Convair B-58 Hustler, American’s first supersonic bomber.

B58

The Cessna T-37 jet trainer. I also used to work on these.

T37

The RA-5C Vigilante. In its original configuration as the the Navy A-5 bomber, it had a novel way of dropping its nuclear bomb load. It spit it out the tail!  So many jokes, so little time.

RA-5C

NASA’s Super Guppy. It’s amazing that this thing could fly.

SuperGuppy

The Convair B-36 nuclear bomber. It had 10 engines, 6 prop engines and 4 jet engines!

B36

At this point we took a break and went down the road to a great little Mexican place called Poco and Mom’s.  And the food was great.  My Green Chili Chicken Enchiladas was the best I’ve ever had.

Coming back to the museum, we began touring some of the displays. This is the Altair 8800 computer, probably the first practical home computer. It was a kit and was my first computer.

Altair

This is a photograph of Grace Hopper’s logbook showing the first computer ‘bug’.  It was a moth that got caught in a relay, and is the origin of the term ‘computer bug’. This was from the time when computers filled whole buildings.

FirstBug

This is a Grumman F-4U Corsair of ‘Baa Baa Black Sheep” fame.

F4U

This is a German V1 ‘Buzz Bomb”.

V1

The ‘Columbus’, a updated version of the Grumman J2F-2 Duck.Columbus

After a great time at the museum, we headed back to the park, passing Davis-Monthan AFB, America’s aircraft boneyard. Thousands of  aircraft are mothballed here.

DavisMonthan

This satellite photo shows just a small portion of the planes stored there.

DavisMonthan2

On the way home, we stopped by Fry’s Supermarket to pick up some groceries. Fry’s is Kroger’s here in Arizona.

This is our last full day here in Tucson. Tomorrow we’re heading over to Gila Bend for a few days before moving on to Yuma.

More tomorrow…