This Collection is housed in the Milestones of Flight Exhibition Hall at RAF Museum London, providing the perfect setting for many unique aircraft that trace the first century in the history of aviation and the Royal Air Force.
Single seat VTOL ground attack fighter.
Single engined, single seat monoplane with rotary tractor engine. Rear fuselage open, unfabricked structure.
Small biplane hang glider. Undoped white lined covering fitted 2001. Similar to Chanute built gliders.
Single engined two seat open cockpit biplane with fixed undercarriage.
Twin-engined two-seat light bomber of all wood construction.
A 'swing role' aircraft in that it can operate as fighter and, in due course as the design evolves, as a bomber and a ground attack aircraft, built by a consortium of European countries.
Single seat fighter biplane.
Single engined biplane light bomber.
One of the most powerful high performance fighters to see operational service in World War II.
Single piston engined fighter monoplane with bubble canopy. Dark green upper surfaces with medium grey lower surfaces and yellow inner wing and leading edge; wing and fuselage rising sun roundels.
Single engined, single seat monoplane fighter with retractable undercarriage.
Twin turbo engined fighter; tricycle undercarriage. Dark green mottled camouflage upper surface and pale blue under sides with tail fin swastika; fuselage and tail crosses with fuselage code red X.
Single-seat fighter of the Socond World War, fitted with a Rolls-Royce Merlin engine.
A British racing aircraft of the 1930s. A small, single-engine, single-seat, low wing monoplane of wooden construction.
Small 2-seat helicopter, the first helicopter type operated by the RAF.
Single rotary engined single seat biplane fighter.