Explore
Summer fun with us
Pop in today with the kids or grandkids and enjoy exploring New Zealand’s military aviation history with us. There’s plenty for the younger crowd to do with our Pop-Up library space, DropZone and Balloon Busters interactive games, behind-the-scenes tours, Captured! interactive, hunts and our Mosquito Mission simulator. There’s also our café on site.
We’re open each day (except Christmas Day) from 9.30am until 4.30pm and we have a HUGE free carpark. Campervans and caravans welcome!
New exhibiton: Insights
Insights
From delicate pastel and crayon sketches to the brutality of a crash-damaged German bomber engine, Insights offers a tantalising peek at the breadth and depth of our collection. Like many museums, space constraints mean that only a fraction of our one million or so objects can ever be on display. It is a collection containing stories more than 100 years in the making and a source of endless fascination for the team of people who work to catalogue, conserve and care for it.
Featured Exhibition
P-3 Orion
The exhibition includes a scale model of the aircraft dating back to 1968, and a 13-minute documentary featuring interviews with pilots and crew, and a yachtie rescued by the aircraft back in 1994.
P-3 Orion: The story of an extraordinary aircraft is not to be missed!
Our Aircraft
Explore AircraftMore to explore
ICE RESCUE: Sixty-five years ago, an urgent rescue mission was under way in Antarctica after an RNZAF aircraft crashed on an unknown glacier about 640km from Scott Base.
On 15 January 1960 de Havilland Beaver NZ6010 crashed in whiteout conditions during a resupply mission.
The pilots, Squadron Leader Les Jeffs and Flight Lieutenant Peter Rule, were unhurt and managed to get emergency messages out, but difficult weather conditions meant they had to stay put for the moment.
RNZAF Auster NZ1707, piloted by Bill Cranfield, flew to the rescue but the weather closed in again. Five days after the crash landing, on 20 January, they managed to fly the Auster out to Beardmore Glacier.
The Beaver could not be salvaged and remains there today.
You can see the plucky rescue Auster, NZ1707, on display in our collection.
Peter Rule went on to become a Squadron Leader and is a significant figure in the history of the RNZAF.
His distinguished 20-year career ended in 1975 because homosexual men were banned from serving. He committed suicide in 1987, well before the reforms which meant LGBT+ men and women were welcome to serve openly in the RNZAF.
His contribution to the RNZAF is commemorated today by the Squadron Leader Peter Rule Memorial Award for inclusiveness.
His life is also honoured by the Rule Foundation which provides grants for activities that seek to advance the health, wellbeing and visibility of rainbow, takatāpui & MVPFAFF+ communities.
You can read more about Peter’s life here: www.rulefoundation.nz/peters-story
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What an amazing (and sad) story 🌈
doodfile.com/FatalCreashBreakingNews
💪
Our flags are flying at half mast for the funeral of Senior Sergeant Lyn Fleming in Nelson today. We acknowledge the service and sacrifice of Lyn, and our thoughts are with her whanau, friends, and Police as she is farewelled today. ... See MoreSee Less
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Very nice gesture team. RIP Lyn. 💔
RIP Lyn.
Thank you . Very kind gesture ( ex Army and ex NZ police)
RIP
RIP 😢
🫡🫡🫡
⚰️😴
www.smart-tv.welltivi.com/obituary.php
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URGENT CLARIFICATION: It has been brought to our attention that there may be some ongoing confusion between the Miles Aerovan and the Nissan Urvan.
Both served in the RNZAF and both were versatile – if a little underrated – machines. With names so similar, a little confusion is not surprising.
So, we’ve put together a quick and handy guide so you can tell them apart at a glance and put a stop to this unnecessary bewilderment.
Obviously the first, and probably easiest way to your Miles Aerovan apart from your Nissan Urvan, is from their engine notes.
The Miles Aerovan was a twin, powered by a pair of mighty 155-horsepower Blackburn Cirrus Major III engines. The Nissan Urvan was powered by a normally aspirated 99-horsepower in-line four petrol engine known as an NA20s.
With a twin you’d expect to hear more of a drone, while the Urvan emanated a distinctive Nissan four-cylinder burble.
The second giveaway is the wheel arrangement. The Miles Aerovan had a fixed tricycle undercarriage while the Nissan Urvan sported four non-retractable wheels in a conventional arrangement. Plus a spare.
Finally, the easiest way to tell them apart in the hangar was by their rear cargo door arrangement. The Miles Aerovan’s door swung sideways and formed part of the aircraft’s aerodynamic empennage when closed for flight, while the Nissan Urvan’s rear cargo door was hinged from the top. The Nissan’s cargo door could be opened for awkward long loads such as ladders or especially tall Air Cadets without affecting its aerodynamic efficiency, but this would have been much more difficult in the Aerovan.
The RNZAF operated two Miles Aerovan 4s from 1949 until 1950, and no examples survive. The RNZAF operated the Nissan Urvan during the 1990s and they may well have found a second life as backpacker transport.
We hope this clears up any confusion.
You’re welcome.
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I'm still a little confused, the attached photos show only two wheels on each vehicle, no back door hinge arrangement, and no audio?
I was hoping you could clear something else up? We recently went to Corsair Bay but were unable to spot a single F4U. Are we mistaken or are they migratory and the F4U colony is currently elsewhere? Thank you.
Was the Aerovan a mothership for the Urvan? Looks like a short wheelbase Urvan could hide in the back. 😉😁
Of interest there is a video that shows the Aerovan after the Air Force sold it....https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7NDy8uf9ww
I am extremely grateful for this invaluable series of helpful identification guides. Have you considered having them printed as small, handy credit card sized reminders?
Some years ago I rode in a yellow and black Spitfire in Invergargill ... a bit confused since it was on the road, was a bit slow and a lot quieter, could carry more than a pilot/driver and one passenger and a lot cheaper than other operators. But it clearly said Spitfire on the side (ok it also said shuttle but maybe not important ...), remembered the distinctive wing shape clearly. Just wondering ...
How does the glide ratio compare?
Thank you! Now I will be able to recognise my friends campervan in the mall car parks so much easier!
Stick with the Nissan mate, that other thing looks a bit?
Neither of them look like they could actually leave the ground so I can understand the confusion😁
Thank you. This came up in conversation over the lunch table on Christmas Day. There was a heated exchange resulting in the throwing of Christmas crackers. Of course, I was right.
Always good to be able to tell the difference. My campervan corners poorly but SWOOPS like an eagle :-)
Yet another valuable public service announcement. I think this one's my favourite so far 😍
Love these clarifications, whoever came up with these is a genius.
155bhp is 'mighty', but 99bhp is just 'normally aspirated' - just wondering what your mightiness cut-off is, and if the Miles' mightiness came from turbo or supercharger ?
Glad you cleared that up. Thanks.😉😄
They look remarkably similar
It's a little known fact of RNZAF history that the Miles Aerovan won the very first Exercise Bullseye by default, when the RCAF and RAAF arrived and saw it they couldn't stop laughing. The Nissan Urvan never won Bullseye.
Craig Murray - the crossover you deserve!
One flies, the other not!
Only one is permitted on our road's apparently,
Brilliant!
hee hee
Sam Cadman Bubba Sparks mobile
Stephen Lord Chappington Chapman 🤣
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Today we remember those who lost their lives on Black Monday, the darkest day in the RNZAF’s campaign in thePacific.
Eighty years ago, on Monday 15 January 1945, a strike by No. 14 and 16 Squadrons’ Corsairs on Simpson Harbour at Rabaul, Papua New Guinea ended in tragedy. One of the pilots, Flight Lieutenant Francis Keefe was hit by flak and wounded in the arm but managed to parachute into Simpson Harbour.
His comrades attempted to protect him so that a Catalina flying boat could rescue him, and later, as dusk fell a Ventura tried to drop bamboo rafts to Keefe. The fire in both cases was too great from the Japanese defenders. The Corsairs were forced to leave Keefe and head home.
The RNZAF pilot was picked up by the Japanese and taken prisoner, he died of blood poisoning two weeks later.
The surviving Corsairs ran into a tropical storm on their flight to Green Island. Three aircraft crashed into the sea enroute, two collided and one more crashed trying to land at Green Island; the one other disappeared without trace.
Francis Keefe died in captivity on 30 January. The loss of eight pilots and aircraft in a single mission was the worst day in the Pacific and is regarded as the worst in the history of the RNZAF. It became known as Black Monday and you can read Simon Moody's blog about it here: airforcemuseum.co.nz/blog/black-monday-kiyoshi-suzukis-depiction-of-a-pacific-tragedy/
Those lost were: Flying Officer Greville Randell, aged 24, Tauranga; Flight Lieutenant Thomas Randall French Johnson, 30, Gisborne; Flight Sergeant Ronald Wilfred Albrecht, 20, Palmerston North; Flight Lieutenant Bruce Stafford Hay, 23, Taihape; Flight Sergeant John Seddon McArthur, 24, Christchurch; Flying Officer Albert Norman Saward, 22, Hamilton; Flight Sergeant Ian James Munro, 20, Kaitaia; and Flight Lieutenant Francis Keefe, 28, Auckland (died 30 January).
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
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My grandfather, Flying Officer Peter Sheppard, was supposed to be on this flight that day, but his CO ordered him to remain behind as he was unwell. Flying Officer Greville Randell was ordered to take his place, and was one that perished. ☹️ If things had turned out differently, my family would not exist... If any of FO Randell's family are still around, please feel free to PM me - I would love to make contact with you. We will remember them. ❤
This dark day is well documented in Bryan Cox book and his lucky escape from the same fate 😔
Tremendous courage, a story that every NZ school child should know. Our freedom is all down to people like these, the debt can never be truly repaid. So we never forget these stories and we learn from them too.
Such brave men 😔
All heroes of the greatest generation. RIP Francis and all of the remaining airmen who died.
Lest we forget. May they rest in peace.🌹
Thank you for your service lest we forget
Thank you for your service, RIP.
Lest we forget.
Heroes
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