Hawker Siddeley Harrier - Aircraft On Display

Aircraft On Display

  • GR.1 XV277 is on display at the National Museum of Flight, East Fortune, UK.
  • GR.1 XV278 is on display at the Luftwaffenmuseum der Bundeswehr, Gatow, Germany.
  • GR.3 XV748 is on display at the Yorkshire Air Museum, Elvington, UK.
  • GR.3 XV751 is on display at the Gatwick Aviation Museum, Surrey, UK.
  • GR.3 XV752 is on display at Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire, UK.
  • GR.3 XV779 is on display as gate guardian at RAF Wittering, UK.
  • GR.1 XV798 is being transferred from the Bristol Aero Collection,Kemble, UK, which has closed, to storage at the Helicopter Museum, Weston super Mare, UK
  • T.2 XW269 is on display at Airworld Aviation Museum, Caernarfon
  • GR.3 XW919 is on display at the Polish Aviation Museum, Kraków, Poland.
  • T.4 XW934 is on display at the Farnborough Air Sciences Trust, Farnborough, Hampshire, UK.
  • GR.3 XZ129 is on display at the Ashburton Aviation Museum, Ashburton, New Zealand.
  • GR.3 XZ133 is on display at the Imperial War Museum Duxford, UK.
  • GR.3 XZ968 is on display outside the Muckleburgh Collection, Norfolk, UK.
  • GR.3 XZ997 is on display at the Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon, UK.
  • GR.3 XZ998 is on display at the Flugausstellung Leo Junior at Hermeskeil, Germany.
  • Mk 52 G-VTOL is on display at the Brooklands Museum, Surrey, UK.
  • AV-8A 158966 is on display at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
  • AV-8A 159233 is on display at the Imperial War Museum North, Manchester, UK.
  • RAF Hawker Siddeley Harrier GR.Mk.3 in front of the Belize City International Airport terminal.
  • TAV-8A 159382 is on display at the Pima Air and Space Museum in Tucson AZ. Aircraft was placed in AMARG for storage in Oct 1987 and is on loan from the National Aviation Museum at Pensacola, FL.

Read more about this topic:  Hawker Siddeley Harrier

Famous quotes containing the word display:

    Life is extraordinarily suave and sweet with certain natural, witty, affectionate people who have unusual distinction and are capable of every vice, but who make a display of none in public and about whom no one can affirm they have a single one. There is something supple and secret about them. Besides, their perversity gives spice to their most innocent occupations, such as taking a walk in the garden at night.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)