Kathleen Allen Apr 20, 2017 Apr 20, 2017 Updated May 8, 2017 Aircraft history is scattered all over a big dirt lot in southeast Tucson. And once a month, you can explore it. Boneyard Safari, founded ...
Another B-1B was pulled from storage at AMARG and recalled back to duty to bring the BONE fleet back to 45 total Lancers. B-1B Lancer 86-0115 “Rage” is one of the four bombers out of 17 the U.S. Air ...
In 1943, a B-17 Flying Fortress laid low in a boneyard, ready to be torn apart for scraps. The aircraft came with a ...
The aircraft “boneyard” at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base is getting a massive new place to work on resurrecting old military planes. The U.S. Air Force 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration ...
Developing a strategic aircraft reserve -- Aircraft storage and disposal -- Along the storage rows -- Scrapping the big fleets -- Inventory by aircraft type -- Boneyard tours and Pima Air & Space ...
From the air, they look like toys scattered across a giant sandbox—hundreds of airliners slotted nose to tail beneath the glare of a pitiless desert sun. There are the lumbering, humpbacked 747s ...
The concept of a warplane “boneyard,” where old planes go when they retire, is actually pretty rare. While the Pentagon maintains the world’s largest boneyard, the concept is relatively unknown to ...
Beneath the scorching sun, thousands of aircraft sit in silence - engines still, wings stretching across miles of desert.