As you have all probably heard from me before, the NWTA, in
conjunction with the National Atomic Museum and other concerned parties has begun an
effort to help museums get better Nuclear Weapon Displays. During
the months since our Convention in October 2006 we have been literally
deluged with requests for displays and perhaps more significantly with
sources of displays! We now have access to dozens of items, ranging from
the MK 7 to the B61 and W80. Many of these items are already here at
Kirtland AFB. What remains now is to prepare them for distribution.
This will entail inspection and some packaging. A number of them are now
classified. They must be declasssified,
properly documented and marked and then logged into the
NAM's accounting system and also the DOE's.
This will be done by Sandia National Lab personnel. We are starting with
the B/BA/W53. We have several here at KAFB and we have already
disassembled one and declassified it and turned it over to the Atomic Museum
and now awaits pickup. The majority of the 53s are at Nellis AFB and we will
be going there in the early part of May, June, and July. There only
remains a couple at the EOD school at Eglin AFB to finish off. We can
probably make one good one from the two they have and send it over to the Armament Museum. Two or three W53s are also
available and we expect them to go to the NMUSAF (WPAFB) and the PIMA Museum
in Tuscon, AZ.
We are inviting any of you out there who is interested in
this project and would like to dust off their skills to E mail me and let me
know what you would like to do. In addition to turning the wrench and
spray painting we will need writers as we are generating unclassified weapon
descriptions, maintenance procedures and record keeping. We also will
need folks who can provide advise and knowledge to the Museums. The work will
need to be done all across the country not just here at KAFB. So if you have
an aerospace museum nearby, advise them about this effort and tell them to
contact the NWTA or myself. This will mostly be on a first come first
served basis while trying to match available assets to their needs.
Museums we have recently visited have had a wide variety of Nuclear Weapon displays,
ranging from non-existent to great. However, there is no standardization
or consistency and many displays are poorly done with errors, omissions and
some downright lies. A standard source of information is needed to insure
that the displays are accurate and interesting. Additionally, some
museums would like more displays and others would like to pass along excess
asset.
I would like to propose that we form a Center, under the auspices of the NWTA.
The purpose of the Center would be to:
Be an information clearing house for Nuclear
Weapon Displays
Be a source of standardized information for
the preparation of these displays
Be a source of expertise for the displays
Be a coordination point for distribution of
assets
Be a source of volunteer help and expertise
for museum displays
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