Support the winter service and help keep XH558 flying (illustration reveals reality-gap in James Bond Thunderball movie)
Posted via Industry Today. Are you into it? Follow us on Twitter @IndustryToday
For just £20, the historic bomb-bay doors of XH558, the last flying Vulcan, could swing open to reveal your name as one of the vital supporters commemorated on the Winter Service Plaque. The delta-winged Vulcans once stood on Quick Reaction Alert, their bomb-bays ready to carry British, Yellow Sun hydrogen bombs. Now there is only one left flying, delighting more than two million people at airshows every year and inspiring new generations of engineers and aviators.
"We receive no Government funding and no money from the RAF, so we are tremendously grateful to our many passionate supporters whose continuing donations ensure that we have the funds needed to keep XH558 flying," says Vulcan to the Sky chief executive Dr Robert Pleming. "So we have decided to commemorate the generosity of our supporters twice a year, with an Annual Winter Service Plaque and an Annual Display Season Plaque, recognising those companies and individuals who have made a significant contribution."
Each plaque will be mounted in the bomb-bay and will fly with the aircraft for the remainder of her airworthy life. When she retires, they will be displayed at her permanent home. Names can be added up to the end of February, leaving time for the plaque to be manufactured and attached prior to the first flight of the year, currently planned for April.
To add your name to the Winter Service Plaque, visit www.vulcantotheskystore.co.uk/category/WINTER_SERVICE_PLAQUE and select a donation of £20 or more or set-up a monthly standing order. Anyone who has already donated £20 or more to the winter service (ie since October) will automatically have their name included on the plaque. "The service is very expensive - comfortably into six figures - so do please make a further donation if you can or set-up a standing order, which are the bedrock of keeping her alive," adds Pleming.
To stay in-touch with XH558, the last flying Vulcan, and find out how to support the aircraft and enjoy a host of supporter benefits, visit www.vulcantothesky.org/register to sign-up for the newsletter. You can also follow XH558 on Facebook at www.facebook.com/pages/Vulcan-xh558/170427449654925
Why is the Vulcan Important?
The Avro Vulcan is an iconic example of British aerospace engineering at its world-beating best. The design brief was issued by the MoD in 1947 and the plane flew for the first time in 1952, just eleven years after the first flight of its predecessor, the Avro Lancaster. Its impressive list of technical achievements includes being the first successful large delta wing aircraft (leading directly to Concorde), innovations such as anti-lock brakes, and an agility that was so close to a jet fighter's that it was given a fighter-style control column in place of the traditional bomber pilot's yoke.
Success as a Cold War peacekeeper meant that the Vulcan might have flown its entire service life without ever entering combat if it hadn't been for the Falklands Conflict in 1982. After a marathon 8,000 mile flight supported by eleven Victor tankers, Squadron Leader Martin Withers and his crew released the bombs over Port Stanley Airport that prevented Argentina operating its Mirage III fighters from the island and initiated the campaign that recaptured the Falklands. Two years later, the last Vulcans were withdrawn from service.
Today, only one Vulcan is left flying: XH558, owned by the Vulcan To The Sky Trust, a Registered Charity. Returned to the air in 2007, she has become an airshow phenomenon. "People forget that airshows attract seven million people annually. That's second only to football," says Dr Pleming. "An appearance by the Vulcan builds even on this remarkable level, typically increasing attendance by 20-40 percent. Airshow organisers talk about 'the Vulcan Effect' and have described the aircraft as a national treasure."
Squadron Leader Martin Withers DFC (he won the Distinguished Flying Cross for his heroic Vulcan mission to Port Stanley) is a passionate supporter of the educational role of the plane. "Part of our mission is to ensure that young people learn about the knife-edge fear of the Cold War," he explains. "If I had been ordered to press the button that releases the nuclear payload, there would almost certainly have been no Britain left to fly home to.The Vulcan is the most powerful symbol of a remarkable period in British history that we must never forget"
Withers is also passionate about the aircraft's growing role in technical education. "This is one of the most iconic pieces of aerospace technology ever, and it is thoroughly British. The Vulcan fires young people with a passion to develop and build world-beating technologies. And we can help give them those skills through training modules that call upon the extraordinary knowledge, rigour and precision needed to restore and maintain the UK's only flying 'complex' heritage aircraft."
The Trust hopes to fly the aircraft for at least two more display seasons, including the year of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in 2012, which is also the 60th anniversary of the first flight of the Vulcan and the 30th anniversary of its heroic role in the Falklands conflict. "The airframe has limited time before it will no longer be possible to renew its Permit to Fly," explains Dr Pleming. "After that, we hope to develop a museum and educational centre around the plane, funded by conference, leisure and other commercial activities."
Contact Information
Market Engineering
North Bar House
Banbury
Oxon
OX16 0TH