Aviation museum

Aviation Heritage Museum

Australia City of Melville
Aviation Heritage Museum
Aviation Heritage Museum · Wikipedia

About

The Aviation Heritage Museum is a museum located in Bull Creek, Perth, Western Australia. Created and maintained by the Air Force Association of Western Australia, it houses many military and civilian aircraft, aircraft replicas and aircraft engines, of types that have served in the Royal Australian Air Force or that have relevance to aviation in Western Australia.

The Western Australian division of the association acquired a Mark 22 Supermarine Spitfire from England in 1959 and erected it on a pole outside its headquarters in Perth. [ clarification needed ] On 1 December 1962 the association acquired an Avro Lancaster from the French. Many other exhibits of interest to association members and the public were obtained in the following years. With financial assistance from the Western Australian Government a museum building was erected at the association's memorial estate in Bull Creek, officially opening in November 1979. In order to house the Avro Lancaster and a Douglas Dakota, the association raised funds and erected a second museum building that was opened in December 1983. Since then many smaller buildings have been added, including a 48,000 book library, photo lab, workshop, model repair shop and technical library.

The museum acquired a Tornado in 2022 and a Hornet in 2023.

The following exhibits are on static display in the museum:

- English Electric Canberra, license built by Government Aircraft Factories

Aviation Heritage Museum

- Gardan GY-80 Horizon (Sugar Bird Lady)

- General Dynamics F-111C crew module ("ejectable cockpit")

- McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet A21-101

- Tandem unmanned aerial vehicle for mining applications

- Supermarine Spitfire (outside, at the entrance)

Aviation Heritage Museum

The museum specimen of the R-3350 is the no. 1 engine from a C-121G Super Constellation from NASA, registration N421NA. This Constellation flew between Geraldton and the Carnarvon satellite tracking station in support of the Apollo space program.

- Remains from the NASA Skylab. These were found in Western Australia, after Skylab's re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere in 1979.

- English Electric Canberra, license built by Government Aircraft Factories

- Gardan GY-80 Horizon (Sugar Bird Lady)

- General Dynamics F-111C crew module ("ejectable cockpit")

Aviation Heritage Museum

- McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet A21-101

- Tandem unmanned aerial vehicle for mining applications

- Supermarine Spitfire (outside, at the entrance)

The museum specimen of the R-3350 is the no. 1 engine from a C-121G Super Constellation from NASA, registration N421NA. This Constellation flew between Geraldton and the Carnarvon satellite tracking station in support of the Apollo space program.

- Remains from the NASA Skylab. These were found in Western Australia, after Skylab's re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere in 1979.