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Post by vs on May 16, 2015 23:32:50 GMT 12
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Post by pjw4118 on May 17, 2015 10:16:01 GMT 12
Very nice , where is it located ?
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Post by baronbeeza on May 17, 2015 10:52:26 GMT 12
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Post by harvard1041 on May 17, 2015 13:54:00 GMT 12
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Post by aeromedia on May 17, 2015 19:34:40 GMT 12
Some good looking pole dancers up near the top there.
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Post by planecrazy on May 18, 2015 20:57:11 GMT 12
Wow looks great and well looked after, sorry if this is a silly question, was the two seat version at the bottom factory version or a locally done conversion?
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Post by raymond on May 18, 2015 22:35:41 GMT 12
Wow looks great and well looked after, sorry if this is a silly question, was the two seat version at the bottom factory version or a locally done conversion? The TA-4S trainers were not the standard TA-4 with a common cockpit for the student and instructor pilot, but were instead rebuilt by Lockheed with a 28-inch (710 mm) fuselage plug inserted into the front fuselage and a separate bulged cockpit (giving better all round visibility) for the instructor seated behind the student pilot. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ST_Aerospace_A-4SU_Super_Skyhawk#A-4SU_and_TA-4SU_Super_Skyhawk
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Post by vagabond on Jun 10, 2021 12:21:47 GMT 12
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Post by vagabond on Jun 10, 2021 12:26:50 GMT 12
I recently took a bus from Singapore [Scotts Road from memory] to a bus station with a service that connected directly to the Air Force Museum. In fact, it stopped outside the gate. Interesting history of the Singapore Air Force but sadly I was the only visitor at the Museum. Not another person to be seen and staff about as rare! A single visit was suffioent.
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Post by Peter Lewis on Jun 10, 2021 19:21:48 GMT 12
I visited some years ago. Impressed.
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