China
Aviation Museum is about 40 miles north of Beijing and
located in the foot of fascinating Xiao Tang Hill (XiaoTangShan)
in Chang Ping County. On November 11, 1989, it was opened
to the public in the 40th Anniversary of the Founding
of Air Force of the Chinese People's Liberation Army.
On
April, 1991, the air force official ratified its name
as the "Air Force Aviation Museum". In the foreign
exchanges, it is called as the China Aviation Museum.
The museum was founded on part of an airbase; the runways
are a mile distant and are connected to the museum by
a long taxiway, which is also used as access for the traffic.
Next to the museum the taxiway continues up the hill;
in the hill is a large U-shaped tunnel, which, in the
operational days of this part of the airbase undoubtedly
sheltered numerous aircraft. Near to the taxiway there
are some aprons and a hangar, so there is room for many,
many aircraft, mostly military but also some civil ones.
At
present, the aviation museum collected more than 200 airplanes
with the types exceeding 100, and weapon and equipped
samples like ground-air missile, high cannon, radar, aviation
bomb and aviation cameras. Among which, lots of them are
the precious cultural relics of the country and world
aviation treasure works.

After
the Second World War the Chinese air force mainly got
Russian-built aircraft like MIG-15, MIG-17, Tupolev TU-4,
and so on. Very soon China restarted its own aviation
industry and manufactured these Russian aircraft under
license, many types being radically improved. Their notation
was easy: attack aircraft are indicated with an 'A', bombers
with a 'B', fighters with an 'F', transport aircraft with
an 'Y' and helicopters with a 'Z'. In some cases a 'T'
for trainer or 'R' for reconnaissance are added. The first
Chinese built attack aircraft was called 'A-1'; a BT-5
is a Chinese built trainer version of the Il-28 bomber.
The factories in China do not have a name; there are a
lot of aircraft manufacturers, and they are simply indicated
by the town where they are housed. Well-known plants are
in Shenyang (F-2, F-5, F-6, F-8), Xi'an (F-5, F-6, F-7,
H-6), Chengdu (F-7), Harbin (Y-5, Y-12, H-5, Z-5) and
Nanchang (CJ-5, CJ-6, A-5).
The
museum has three parts. First the tunnel, of which both
entrances are guarded by an F-7 (the Chinese MIG-21).
More than fifty aircraft are parked inside the tunnel
in two rows, but photographing is difficult as it is rather
dark. At one side there are a number of aircraft from
WWII, both Chinese and captured Japanese aircraft. Then
a number of aircraft from the period after the Second
World War follow, like the MIG-15 and MIG-17, their Chinese
alternatives F-2 and F-5, some F-6 and F-7s and an F-8.
Some of the older F-2 and F-5s have the well known 'MIG-kills'
under the canopy; in this case they shot American and
South Korean aircraft during the Korean War. Five MIG-15s
from the Korean War (air force of North Korea) are present.
Further
on are four A-5 'Fantan' attack aircraft and three beautiful
B-5s (the Chinese IL-28), a standard B-5, a BT-5 trainer
and a BR-5R reconnaissance aircraft. At the end of the
tunnel there are some aircraft from abroad; a Saber from
the air force of Pakistan, an US Army UH-1H, captured
in Vietnam, and the latest acquisition of the museum:
an F-104S from the Italian air force. This Star fighter,
coded 4-1/MM6795, was flown to China by an Italian Hercules
and handed over by the Italian Ambassador to the museum
in May 2001. Finally there is an Apache helicopter, but
a closer look can make you learn that it is a full scale
mock up, made by a Chinese colonel in his spare time.
The
second part of the museum is a 'flight line' of nineteen
fighters parked on the taxiway outside. No ropes, fences
or information boards make these aircraft perfect for
photographing. One of the aircraft is a MIG-15 from North
Korea, the others are from the Chinese air force. Four
FT-2s (the trainer version of the MIG-15), one FT-6 (the
trainer version of the MIG-19, very rare!) and thirteen
F-5s (the Chinese MIG-17).
The
third part of the museum are the aprons, the grass, the
corners of the airfield and even the small lake. Here
the large aircraft and the helicopters can be found, together
with even more fighters. Some aircraft worth mentioning
are the following - two giant TU-4s (the Russian version
of the B-29 bomber) in Chinese colors; a TU-16 bomber,
although this type is still active in the Chinese forces;
two C-46 Commandos without any registration; four Russian
built C-47 Dakotas of the Chinese air force; an Il-10,
Il-12 and Il-14; the only Viscount the Chinese ever had;
the AN-12, AN-24 and a TU-124. Also some AN-2s, two of
which have floats! And a number of helicopters, include
five Z-5s (MI-4) and two Z-6s (MI-8). Very fine is a Be-12
near a small lake, especially made for this flying boat.
"Feng
Ru No. 2" Airplane is one of the airplane exhibitions
that elaborately reproduced by the aviation museum. Feng
Ru is China's first airplane designer, producer and aeroplanist,
he is also the first Chinese who won the Aeroplanist Certificated
issued by International Aviation Association. On December
7, 1903, the airplane that was designed and produced by
American Wright brothers succeed in its experimental flying
at first time in the world. Within 6 years later, a Chinese
named Feng Ru also succeed in flying his self-made airplane.
Its flying height and distance far exceeds that of the
Wright brothers.
Feng
Ru built another aircraft and took both planes home to
China. That was about all he had time for. In August 1912,
soon after his return, he died after his plane crashed
during an exhibition in Guangzhou. In death, he became
a national hero. Sun Yat-sen ordered the words "Chinese
Aviation Pioneer" engraved on a monument in his honor.
Address: Mail Box No. 5806, Documentsnshan, Chang Ping
County, Beijing.
Telephone:
010- 69784882 69784883
Opening
time: 8:00 to 17: 30.
Bus route: Please take Bus No. 912 at Andingmen station,
and get off at the gate of Aviation Museum directly.
Ticket:
40 yuan (US$5)
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