Located in the Arizona desert, the world-famous "Boneyard" (officially the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group) is not a simple junkyard where old military planes come to die; it is a ...
FOR INFANTRY and armoured cavalry, target practice is relatively straightforward. Load up on training rounds and aim for paper bullseyes, plywood cutouts or life-size models of enemy vehicles.
The 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group operates a storage facility at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base that everybody calls the “boneyard.” Here, more than 4,400 aircraft are mothballed in ...
Former Air Force pilots reflect on the Boneyard, aka the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona.
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 ...
There are dozens of prominent boneyards around the world where, in some cases, thousands of aircraft are kept, whether to be broken up or left in storage before returning to service. Ideally, an ...
The iconic jet was unveiled earlier this month, and it's just the latest addition to the museum's collection of military ...