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A fibreglass replica of a Supermarine Spitfire Mk.XVI sits on a pole outside the entrance to the RAAFA Aviation Heritage Museum in Bull Creek, near Perth in Western Australia. This replaced the original Spitfire Mk.22 PK481 which is now restored and on display inside the museum. (photo by Phil Buckley)
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The RAAFA Aviation Heritage Museum – An Overview
by Phil Buckley
The Aviation Heritage Museum, maintained by the Royal Australian Air Force Association at Bull Creek near Perth in Western Australia, has an important collection of historically significant and rare aircraft associated with RAAF history, along with many other aviation-related artifacts gathered over the past six decades.
The collection is owned and operated by the Western Australian Division of the RAAF Association. The idea for the museum goes back to 1929 when the group formed which became the genesis for the RAAF Association. The Association acquired the Kalgoolie Biplane as a exhibit. Sadly, this historic aircraft (the first aircraft built in Western Australia) was later donated to the Perth Museum, where it fell under neglect, and was eventually scrapped soon after the end of WWII. The Association’s next aircraft was Supermarine Spitfire Mk.22 PK481, which they acquired in August, 1958 from their sister organization, the RAF Association in Shoreham, England. It was almost another year before the Spitfire arrived in Perth, Australia. It became a centerpiece for the RAAFA club house, mounted outside on a pole at Adelaide Terrace. This development soon saw more aircraft acquired, and just three years later the association acquired an Avro Lancaster B.VII from the French Navy. By 1968, with a growing collection of items, the RAAFA realized that they needed a museum building, so they set up a fund to finance it. The 1960s and 1970s witnessed further expansion at the museum as they gathered more artifacts, ranging from whole aircraft, to aircraft parts and engines, books, photographs and other ephemera.
The main hangar space features several historic aircraft including Lancaster B.VII NX622, Spitfire Mk.22 PK481, GAF-built EE Canberra A84-230, and Macchi MB.326H A7-066. The Spitfire was once on the pole out front of the museum, but was replaced by the fibreglass replica currently on display. (photo by Phil Buckley)
In 1971 the RAAFA formalized their plans for a museum building, and founded the Aviation Historical Group to help support it. The new group comprised members of the RAAFA, but also included private collectors and aircraft restorers from around Perth. Tied in with this development, the Association, catering to its older members, also envisaged a retirement village and larger club house. By the late 1970s the museum received a AU$100,000 donation from a Western Australian government-sponsored fund for construction of the first museum building (now referred to as the South Wing). The new museum opened on November 17th, 1979. This first structure held all of the collection’s smaller aircraft and artifacts, however, larger exhibits such as the Lancaster and Douglas Dakota were too large, and remained outdoors.
PBY-5A Bu.46624 served in the U.S. Navy during WWII. The type has a long history in Australia, and the Australian American Catalina Memorial Foundation acquired this example in the USA for display in Perth. She has been at the museum since 2007. (photo by Phil Buckley)
As the museum grew, the state government again donated money to enable construction of the museum’s second building (North Wing). This opened on December 17th, 1983. Finally, the Lancaster, Dakota and Catalina could come safely undercover. Since then the museum has added further facilities, including a walk way inside the North Wing, three portable buildings (prefabs) which house the museum’s library, photographic archive, a model aeroplane group and the accessioning offices. A new workshop went up behind the South Wing after the old one was demolished to make way for the Association’s Mirage Apartments retirement facility.
Australia was a strong American ally during the Vietnam War, committing thousands of troops to the conflict between 1962 and 1972. The museum has a special exhibit dedicated to Australia’s contribution, whcih features a RAAF UH-1H Iroquois helicopter (photo by Phil Buckley)
The F-111C flight capsulre. Unlike most combat aircraft today, which use ejection seats to evacuate aircrew in an emergency, the F-111 would separate the entire cockpit section from the aircraft. The F-111 was initially intended to operated in combat at sustained supersonic speeds. Ejecting at such velocities in a conventional seat is often fatal, so the crew capsule was designed to ameliorate this issue. The XB-70 Valkyrie bomber had a similar ejection system. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Restoration Projects:
While most of the museum’s aircraft are fully restored and already on display, the restoration team are currently working on a pair of interesting flight simulators, including a WWII-era Link Trainer and a much more unusual Cold War-era F-111F simulator.
F-111F Simulator at RAAFA Bull Creek
As many readers will know, the Royal Australian Air Force was the only export customer to field the mighty General Dynamics F-111 Aardvark. In all, 28 F-111C’s, supplemented by a further 15 second-hand F-111Gs, served in the RAAF prior to their retirement in December, 2010. While the museum does not have an F-111 on display, they do have a crew capsule from a former RAAF F-111C. They also have an F-111 systems trainer which is owned by museum volunteer Geoff Brueder. Acquired in the USA in 2012, Brueder is restoring the simulator, which is essentially an adapted F-111F crew capsule. Once it is complete, Brueder will connect it to a flight simulator with a video screen so that the museum can make a little extra money from discerning visitors who wish to experience the cockpit up close and personal. The F-111 simulator will also receive the appropriate markings for an Australian-operated aircraft.
The F-111 flight simulator. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Inside the naked crew compartment, which was being prepared for a fresh coat of paint during the author’s visit. (photo by Phil Buckley)
WW2 era Link trainer
Also in the workshop during WarbirdsNews visit was another flight simulator, this one being a WWII-era Link D2 trainer. This device is crude in nature, but was designed to provide blind-flying training for nascent pilots, so they could gain some experience flying solely on instruments in the safe environs of the flight school hangar. Designed in the late 1920s by Edwin Link in the USA, the Link Trainer enjoyed world-wide success in its various forms, and greatly contributed to the Allied war effort during WWII. The RAAF received 140 of them for training their pilots, and continued using them into the 1970s, which resulted in quite a number of them surviving long enough to be preserved. The one in the museum’s workshop is undergoing restoration to operable status, and will hopefully allow the chance for museum visitors to experience what it was like in one of these primitive, though effective flight training aids.
The Link Trainer D2 in the restoration shop sitting atop its motorized gimble assembly. (photo by Phil Buckley)
A view inside the crude ‘cockpit section’ of the Link Trainer, showing the rudimentary instrument panel upon which the trainee pilot would learn to rely to practise their blind flying technique. (photo by Phil Buckley)
A fibreglass replica of a Supermarine Spitfire Mk.XVI sits on a pole outside the entrance to the RAAFA Aviation Heritage Museum in Bull Creek, near Perth in Western Australia. This replaced the original Spitfire Mk.22 PK481 which is now restored and on display inside the museum. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The nose of Avro Lancaster B.VII NX622. This aircraft was built under license by Austin Motors for use in Tiger Force, the planned Far East British heavy bomber fleet for pursuing the bombing campaign against Japan. WWII ended before Tiger Force could deploy of course. This Lancaster ended up flying with the French Navy alongside 21 others of the type. The French retired her on the island of New Caledonia in 1962 and donated her to the RAAFA at that time. She currently wears the markings of LL847 which was shot down with her Australian crew on 18 December 1944 . (photo by Phil Buckley)
The main hangar space features several historic aircraft including Lancaster B.VII NX622, Spitfire Mk.22 PK481, GAF-built EE Canberra A84-230, and Macchi MB.326H A7-066. The Spitfire was once on the pole out front of the museum, but was replaced by the fibreglass replica currently on display. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The museum’s CA-16 Wirraway A20-688 (painted as A20-668, a 5 Squadron example). Based on the North American NA-16, this aircraft was designed and built in Australia. The RAAF mainly used it as a trainer, but armed a few early examples for use as stopgap fighters during the dark early days of the Pacific War. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The Link Trainer D2 in the restoration shop sitting atop its motorized gimble assembly. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Another view of the Link Trainer inside the museum workshop. (photo by Phil Buckley)
A view inside the crude ‘cockpit section’ of the Link Trainer, showing the rudimentary instrument panel upon which the trainee pilot would learn to rely to practise their blind flying technique. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Another view of the cockpit section. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The motorized gimble assembly upon which the Link Trainer is mounted. This machinery would move the enclosed ‘cockpit section’ above in accordance to the control inputs from the trainee pilot, to give them some sensory feedback on their actions. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The F-111 flight simulator. (photo by Phil Buckley)
A nice side-on view of the Aardvark flight simulator. When complete, visitors will be able to sit in the cockpit. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The F-111 flight simulator wil be painted to represent an Australian-operated example. (photo by Phil Buckley)
A head-on view of ther F-111 trainer during the early stages of its restoration. The tail of Spitfire Mk.22 PK481 is visible in the background. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Inside the naked crew compartment, which was being prepared for a fresh coat of paint during the author’s visit. (photo by Phil Buckley)
PBY-5A Bu.46624 served in the U.S. Navy during WWII. The type has a long history in Australia, and the Australian American Catalina Memorial Foundation acquired this example in the USA for display in Perth. She has been at the museum since 2007. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Australia was a strong American ally during the Vietnam War, committing thousands of troops to the conflict between 1962 and 1972. The museum has a special exhibit dedicated to Australia’s contribution, whcih features a RAAF UH-1H Iroquois helicopter (photo by Phil Buckley)
The F-111C flight capsulre. Unlike most combat aircraft today, which use ejection seats to evacuate aircrew in an emergency, the F-111 would separate the entire cockpit section from the aircraft. The F-111 was initially intended to operated in combat at sustained supersonic speeds. Ejecting at such velocities in a conventional seat is often fatal, so the crew capsule was designed to ameliorate this issue. The XB-70 Valkyrie bomber had a similar ejection system. (photo by Phil Buckley)
The crew capsule to a former RAAF F-111C Aardvark. (photo by Phil Buckley)
Richard Mallory Allnutt's aviation passion ignited at the 1974 Farnborough Airshow. Raised in 1970s Britain, he was immersed in WWII aviation lore. Moving to Washington DC, he frequented the Smithsonian’s National Air & Space Museum, meeting aviation legends.
After grad school, Richard worked for Lockheed-Martin but stayed devoted to aviation, volunteering at museums and honing his photography skills. In 2013, he became the founding editor of Warbirds News, now Vintage Aviation News. With around 800 articles written, he focuses on supporting grassroots aviation groups.
Richard values the connections made in the aviation community and is proud to help grow Vintage Aviation News.