Warbirds and Airshows
By David D Jackson

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  Space Coast Regional Warbird Airshow (Tico), Titusville, FL   Seymour-Johnson AFB, Goldsboro, NC   MCAS Beaufort, Beaufort, SC   TBM Reunion, Peru, IL   Gathering of Warbirds, Waukesha, WI   Spirit of St. Louis Airshow, Chesterfield, MO
2019 Airshows


Wings over Wayne Warbird Photo Review
Warbirds at the Seymour-Johnson AFB, Goldsboro, NC Airshow 2019 - April 27-28, 2019 - Photos taken Saturday, April 27, 2019. 

This was my second trip to the Wings over Wayne Airshow at Seymour-Johnson AFB; the first being four years ago.  Wayne in the airshow title refers to the county the base is in.  The airshow is done on a huge ramp belonging to the 916th Refueling Wing.  For the show, the Wing's KC-135s are moved to another location on the base.  One of the show's static displays on the ramp was a KC-46A Pegasus, the next refueling aircraft for the USAF.  The 916th is slated to receive the new KC-46 to replace its KC-135s.  Originally, this was scheduled to be completed by 2020, but to date the USAF has only accepted two of the new tankers.  Hopefully, the next time I come back to Wings over Wayne I will be able to see a KC-46 belonging to Seymour-Johnson fly.


The new KC-46A is one of two now owned by the USAF.  Note that the aircraft has no unit markings on it.  It came into the show from McConnell AFB.


P-51D "Swamp Fox" is a normal visitor to the show.  It was parked in the same location in 2016.


Air Force F-35s are becoming more plentiful.  In 2016, there was only one on the ramp.  This year this square of four of them were on display.  Construction of hangar in background will be for the KC-46A's that will be stationed here.


There was also a square of four F-15Es from the base with a Spitfire located in the middle of the display.


The history of the 4th Fighter Wing based at Seymour-Johnson AFB goes all the way back to the American Eagle Squadrons that flew for the RAF until the U.S. entered World War Two.  Those three squadrons were then transferred to the 4th Fighter Group in September1942


This particular Spitfire is a Mark IX, serial number 7243, built by Vickers.  It came over from the Military Aviation Museum in Virginia Beach, VA.


Also filling up some of the huge ramp was this B-52H.

Below are just a few photos from the three and half hours of flying while I was at the show.  One of the issues, from a photography standpoint, was that the crowd faced the south, with the problem of the sun backlighting many of the photos.


Show time, with an overhead pass by four F-15Es.


During the landings after the show opening, there were several missed approaches by the F-15s.  I was in a good location as they turned out right in front of me.


The first act was a warbird with the T-33 Ace Maker.  There was a special media location set-up on a semi-trailer to the left of airshow center.  This appeared to be for those with media credentials, as there was no advertised photo pit.


Gene Soucy with his AgCat is always one of my favorites.  Lots of noise and smoke while Gene keeps the aircraft in front of the crowd during the routine.


Tora Tora Tora was at the show for the third time in a row. 


It has been a while since I have seen Tora, and the P-36 replica to dog fight the replica Zero was new to me.  The last time I saw Tora it was using a P-40 for the American aircraft.  According to the person sitting next to me at the show, the P-36 was at the 2017 Seymour-Johnson show. 


Having an organic aircraft within the group to play the part of the defending aircraft at Pearl Harbor makes sense.  The group is not dependent on an outside P-40 to make a full show.


Randy Ball in his Mig-17 did his normal show of fast, low passes.  He doesn't know how to go slow.


This was the first of two different C-17 demos I would see for the weekend, as there was also one a MCAS Beaufort the next day.


The C-17 prepares to land as the F-35A Demo and the Heritage Flight P-51 get ready to take off.

 


It is almost universal, at all of the shows I attend that have a Heritage Flight, that the crowd always claps and cheers as the two aircraft come by.  It is a show favorite.


Before the demo, the F-35 was at the opposite end of the field on the hot ramp.  When it was done, it came down and parked at show left.


This year, the F-35 Demo pilot is Capt. Andrew Olson.  Here he is talking with one of the spectators.


There was very good sized crowd at the show on Saturday.  This shows just a small portion of the persons visiting the show.  When I left the show later in the day, it appeared that every place a vehicle could be parked, including the golf course across the street from the ramp, had a vehicle in it.  It is always good to see such a large crowd at the show.

The last act before the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds was the Combined Forces Demonstration, which was composed of the two A-10s, four F-15Es, one KC-135, one C-17 and the U.S. Army Black Daggers.


The F-15s were popping flares during their simulated attack on enemy forces.  With the big wing of the F-15 blocking the sun from the top, the flare really lit up the underside of the aircraft when it was expended from the aircraft.


The jumpers from the Army Black Daggers were not able to do a flag jump at the beginning of the show; but by the time of the Combined Forces Demo, the winds had died down.  Four of the Black Daggers can be seen exiting the C-17 jump aircraft.


 Here a jumper's equipment bag is just about to touch down.


The demo finished with this fly-by.

Per my normal procedure, an exit of the field was in order before everyone else decided to leave.  It still took almost an hour to walk back to my truck and exit the base .  Only one lane of traffic was being let out the main gate, so it was slow going.  I am pretty sure that while I was eating dinner in Florence, SC, 150 miles away, many persons with tired and cranky children were still stuck in traffic trying to get off base.

Side Trips:  Actually, "Side Trips" is not the proper title for this section, as shown here are places I visited en-route to the final destination of the airshow at MCAS Beaufort on Sunday.  Without these stops along the way, it might not make as much sense to travel the distances involved to go watch airplanes fly.  But it is not the destination, but the journey along the way that makes for a complete trip.


Located in Moundsville, WV Grave Creek Mounds is an Adena era burial mound that is over 2,000 years old.  It is 60 feet high, 240 feet in diameter, and filled with 60,000 tons of dirt.  This location is only 20 minutes south of I-70 in Wheeling, WV.  Numerous times, I have gone through Wheeling in a hurry to get somewhere, or to go home after a trip.  For this trip, Moundsville was planned as my first stop.


From the top of the Grave Creek Mound, the former WV State Penitentiary can be seen across the street.  It has a foreboding and gothic appearance.  Like several other former prisons around the country, it is a historical site, and a tourist attraction. 


The Green Bank Observatory in Green Bank, WV is located in a valley with mountains surrounding it to keep earth-generated radio waves from interfering with the radio waves the Green Bank Telescope is receiving from the universe.  By West Virginia law, cell phones, wireless, and microwaves are not allowed in the valley.  If spurious radio waves are detected, a truck is dispatched to find the location of the offending problem, so that it can be removed.  This was the one place I really wanted to visit besides the airshows.  Due to the fact that Green Bank is in the middle of nowhere, much of my trip was planned around a visit here.


No matter what units one uses, it can be seen that the detected radio waves detected by the Green Bank Telescope are considerably smaller than  a cell phone call.


Why do the radio astronomers measure in Janskys?  Because in 1932 Karl Jansky, while working for Bell Labs, built an antenna like this one to find where the interference was coming from during long distance call using high frequency radio waves.  In the process, he discovered radio waves from the universe.  This is a replica of the original antenna he used.


This antenna was a real surprise for me.  When Grote Reber, a radio amateur in Wheaton, IL read about Jansky's work, he built this radio telescope in his mother's backyard in 1937.  He was the country's first radio astronomer, and mapped the early radio waves with this original unit.  In the early 1960s, Mr. Reber donated the radio telescope to Green Bank and supervised its installation.  His original radios and recording equipment are in the museum at Green Bank.


The current iteration of Mr. Reber's radio telescope is the Green Bank Telescope.  It is 100 meters in diameter and is the largest steerable radio telescope in the world.  It stands 485 feet tall, weighs 17 million pounds, and its collecting disk is 2.3 acres in size.  This photo was taken from outside the exclusion zone at Green Bank.  For those of us taking the tour inside the exclusion zone where this and several other smaller radio telescopes are located, we were not allowed to use our digital cameras.  We had to purchase a disposable film camera.  Also, the only vehicles allowed in the exclusion zone are powered by diesel engines.  Digital cameras and the sparkplugs in gasoline engines generate too much electrical interference to be allowed so close to the radio telescopes.


This and the next photo are from the disposable film camera.  Both photos were taken from the same general location.  Note how the antenna has moved about 180 degrees in the 5-10 minutes the tour was at this location.  The 17 million pounds rides on sixteen steel wheels on a circular track.  Four wheels can be seen at the left corner of the base.  Each wheel is therefore carrying over a million pounds.  There is no discernable noise from the antenna as it was moving. 


The AAF Tank Museum in Danville, VA is one of the two largest privately owned tank and armor collections in the U.S.  This is the center exhibition hall, in what was a factory.  There are bays on either side of it, with more armored vehicles.


In spite of all of the excellent armor on display, I think this prop from the 1953 motion picture "War of the Worlds" is the coolest display in the museum.


This is the main lobby of the Airborne and Special Operations Museum in downtown Fayetteville, NC.  This should not be confused with the 82nd Airborne Museum, which is located at nearby Fort Bragg.


One of the many displays inside is this C-47 that is hanging overhead in the museum.  It is just one of many outstanding displays inside the museum.

 

 


 
Home  Indiana Museums    Indiana Tanks on Outside Display   The Beginning    Revisions   First Flight of P-38F Glacier Girl  
USS Theodore Roosevelt    WWII Aircraft Manufacturing Sites    Gateguards
 2007 Airshows   2008 Airshows  22009 Airshows   2010 Airshows    2011 Airshows    2012 Airshows   2013 Airshows   2014 Airshows    2015 Airshows  2016 Airshows    2017 Airshows    2018 Airshows  
2019 Airshows   2020 Airshows   2021 Airshows   2022 Airshows   2023 Airshows   2024 Airshows
Aviation Museums of the Pacific Northwest
   Display Helicopter Locations   CAL FIRE   PV-2 Harpoon Photos     F6F Hellcat Photos
   Warbird Sightings   WWII US Air-Air Victories   Guest Photos    Indiana Warbirds   Featured Photos  Other Items   Links

Historic Sites   Historic Forts   Historic Texas Independence Sites   Pre-Historic Sites   Historic Manhattan Project Sites   GM Heritage Center


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