Hello Everyone,
I Recently returned from a 2 week trip to the West Coast, Here are a few images taken around DM, the images are of the West side of the Huge Storage Facility, I will post The East side of the Facility and some more Aerial shots later on:
On the last photo, you can see the two 21st SOS MH-53s from Mildenhall 69-5795 & 69-5796 on the Visitors ramp, awaiting Storage.
Hope they have been of Intrest.
Cheers,
Matt
AMARG - Davis-Monthan AFB, AZ (WEST Side)
Forum rules
This is the forum to share your recent aviation photos with the rest of the community, being photos not older than six months at the moment of topic opening. Theme-based topics, not about recent events, should go into the sub-forum. Although we will not screen beforehand, we reserve the right to delete any images, especially if clearly unsharp or otherwise low in quality. For more information on how to upload you images, check this post. In topic titles, please use airfield names in stead of just codes, and be clear about what kind of photos your viewers can expect (e.g. CIV/MIL, location etc.). Finally, bring any photo criticism understandable and to the point, not cynical or offensive! Simultaneously, do not feel offended by criticism per se, but simply explain your motives, taste et cetera, or ignore if you wish so. |
- Thermal
- Scramble Addict
- Posts: 2042
- Joined: 28 May 2003, 15:35
- Type of spotter: F5
- Location: Oxford (UK) & Utrecht (NL)
Nice pics....like the arial shots. Did you make them flying overthere or did you actually make a flight over the facilities?
Keeps hurting seeing those beautiful planes like that.
Realy unbelievable how much hardware the US has stored there.
Keeps hurting seeing those beautiful planes like that.
Realy unbelievable how much hardware the US has stored there.
I always say a boy can learn more at an airport than at any school.
- Homer J Simpson -
- Homer J Simpson -
- Hans.Jacobs
- Scramble Junior
- Posts: 146
- Joined: 08 Aug 2006, 09:10
- Subscriber Scramble: Hans Jacobs
- Location: Singapore
kinda like it that they dont scrap them. everyone knows that these planes (99.99% of them) will never fly again. So storing them is fairly useless, if not for nostalgia. Hope they'll be preserved there forever and most of them will find a nice home in a museum somewhere. Some of them were sold in the past to air forces abroad. However, dont think anyone will buy a B-52 or a F-14 squadron... Nice pics!
Storing them in a secure and monitored location will cost a lot of money for sure.. but it will also prevent from F-14 parts "disappearing" and making their way to Iran.
Although they manage to keep some of them airworthy, I can imagine that they must be desperate for shipments of real, factory produced Tomcat parts!
Although they manage to keep some of them airworthy, I can imagine that they must be desperate for shipments of real, factory produced Tomcat parts!
This may be a stupid question, but why do they store these aircraft? I know the F14 is out of service, but there are plenty of aircraft of which I can't think of a reason to store them. Like for instance the 21st SOS MH-53's (one of these particular 2 came to Soesterberg this summer, was my first spotting experience!)
AMARC is not only about storage. These guys retrieve a lot of spare parts of the stored aircraft and sell them to foreign air forces or other US services.
Al lot of aircraft are in flyable storage, which means they may fly again, but probably never will. Hoever, there are also many planes missing all kind of parts. These will never fly again for sure.
And yes, it is a great place. I scored some 1500 aircraft there in one day, back in october 2000.
Al lot of aircraft are in flyable storage, which means they may fly again, but probably never will. Hoever, there are also many planes missing all kind of parts. These will never fly again for sure.
And yes, it is a great place. I scored some 1500 aircraft there in one day, back in october 2000.
Answers will be questioned.....
Don´t forget it is also meant for returning them to the air in case of a major war. Now that might seem only a very remote possibility (and it probably is), but it is still far cheaper than maintaining a very huge air force, or building the planes when you actually do need them. It is like backing up your pictures. You probably never need it, but still you do it (well, most people anyway).Hanz wrote:kinda like it that they dont scrap them. everyone knows that these planes (99.99% of them) will never fly again. So storing them is fairly useless, if not for nostalgia. Hope they'll be preserved there forever and most of them will find a nice home in a museum somewhere. Some of them were sold in the past to air forces abroad. However, dont think anyone will buy a B-52 or a F-14 squadron... Nice pics!
But for the pictures, always nice to see them. I wasn´t aware so many Herculeses were already stored.
Erwin