Veterans Coffee Hour
Air & Space MuseumVeterans and their support networks are invited to join us for a free coffee hour…
Veterans and their support networks are invited to join us for a free coffee hour…
Join Wings Over the Rockies Exploration of Flight for monthly fly-ins featuring planes, pilots, speakers…
Join us at Exploration of Flight for a roundup of radial engine aircraft! Get up…
Get ready for an evening of fun and fright at the Air & Space Museum!…
Exploration of Flight at Centennial Airport will close early on 10/19/2024 at 3:00 pm for…
Get ready for a spook-tacular fun time at Wings Over the Rockies Air & Space Museum!…
Take your trick-or-treating to new heights at Exploration of Flight! Wear your costume and collect…
This event has been canceled. Earn your Aviation Merit Badge! Come and learn about aviation…
Wings Over the Rockies™ is flying together with Food Bank of the Rockies to fight…
Join Wings Over the Rockies Exploration of Flight for monthly fly-ins featuring planes, pilots, speakers…
Visit Wings Over the Rockies Air & Space Museum free of charge as part of…
Join us to experience the museum turned down and participate in sensory friendly activities including…
The Harrier II first flew in 1981 and joined the Marine Corps in 1985. With four exhaust nozzles that can rotate from horizontal to vertical, the Harrier can “jump” off the ground in a short take off run or can even take off and land vertically. It can carry a wide array of bombs, rockets and missiles on six underwing hard points, plus a 25mm rotary cannon with up to 300 rounds of ammunition. Fully loaded, a Harrier carries more firepower than a World War II B-17 Flying Fortress bomber!
This Harrier on display at the Air & Space Museum has seen combat in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and the Red Sea, and has the 3rd highest number of combat hours of any Harrier. It is on loan from the National Naval Aviation Museum.
The F-14 Tomcat played a leading role in the 1986 movie “Top Gun.” The Navy needed an airplane to protect its surface fleets from hostile aircraft and anti-ship missiles at long range. After a naval version of the Air Force’s F-111 fighter bomber proved was unsuitable for aircraft carrier operations, its radar and long-range AIM-54 Phoenix air intercept missile systems were transferred to an entirely new design, the F-14.
One of the most iconic symbols of the Vietnam War is the Bell UH-1 “Huey” helicopter. Hueys served throughout the conflict as troop and cargo carriers, air ambulances, and gunships with the US Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps.
The Harrier II first flew in 1981 and joined the Marine Corps in 1985. With four exhaust nozzles that can rotate from horizontal to vertical, the Harrier can “jump” off the ground in a short take off run or can even take off and land vertically. It can carry a wide array of bombs, rockets and missiles on six underwing hard points, plus a 25mm rotary cannon with up to 300 rounds of ammunition. Fully loaded, a Harrier carries more firepower than a World War II B-17 Flying Fortress bomber!
This Harrier on display at the Air & Space Museum has seen combat in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria and the Red Sea, and has the 3rd highest number of combat hours of any Harrier. It is on loan from the National Naval Aviation Museum.
The F-14 Tomcat played a leading role in the 1986 movie “Top Gun.” The Navy needed an airplane to protect its surface fleets from hostile aircraft and anti-ship missiles at long range. After a naval version of the Air Force’s F-111 fighter bomber proved was unsuitable for aircraft carrier operations, its radar and long-range AIM-54 Phoenix air intercept missile systems were transferred to an entirely new design, the F-14.
One of the most iconic symbols of the Vietnam War is the Bell UH-1 “Huey” helicopter. Hueys served throughout the conflict as troop and cargo carriers, air ambulances, and gunships with the US Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps.
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