Took a visit to Finnish aviation museum as part of my holiday trip.
http://www.airforcemuseum.fi/
Here's some rarities for your (hopefully!) enjoyment
An exact replica of
Thulin Typ D, a gift from a Swedish civilian that was the origin of Finnish Air Forces. The light blue swastika was the lucky charm of their family, and was taken into use as the insignia at the time.
Founded in 1918, the FAF was one of the first independent air forces in the world:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finnish_Air...l_War_1918
The first backbone of FAF was made of
Martinsyde F.4 Buzzards, a plane that missed the Great War by a few months.
19 of these planes were purchased from UK. These served in FAF until late 1930s as training planes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martinsyde_Buzzard
Come WW II and Winter War, the very badly equipped FAF had basically two modern types of aircraft on their use.
The one model was the Dutch
Fokker XXI D, which fought with some success against Soviet fighters of the time, namely I-16s.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fokker_D.XXI
FR-110 , pictured here, achieved 7½ kills during Winter war.
(Behind it, a Finnish Me-109 G6 in late war paint(EDIT: No, the example must be a rushed-in patch of MEs from Germany from June-July 1944, when they were taken into use without a proper paint job. Earlier Finnish MEs had a black/dark green camo as well). Some 160 Me-109G2s, G6s and G8s were bought from Nazi Germany during the so called Continuation War that saw Finland fighting against Soviet Union together with Axis nations.)
The other modern plane at the time of Winter War, was the
Bristol Blenheim Mk I and Mk IV two-engine bombers, a Mk Iv pictured here.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Blenheim#Finland
Now, a true rarity, or should I say curiosity, a Finnish
VL Pyörremyrsky ("Hurricane" - didn't they know the name was already taken!), designed in Finland using mostly Me-109 technology, notably the engine and the propeller. Completed in 1945, and built pretty much completely using
plywood! Apparently had fine flying capabilities, but only two were ever built.
Note the widened landing gear among things, compared to Me-109. Also the wing profile is completely new. A good candidate for the Blitz historical picture quiz, this one?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VL_Py%C3%B6rremyrsky
"The Pyörremyrsky design was considered quite successful. It could outclimb the Bf 109G-6 and it was very manoeuvrable.
The only major problem with the design was found to be the low-quality glue used in the joints." :chin: Should have named it - Ikaros? :eek1:
And finally, the true gem of the display, at least for the time being, ta da da daa...
The Worlds Last Brewster B-239 Buffalo
These early model Brewsters, without the heavy armour that compromised the later production model flight capabilities, and nick named "Butt-Walter" (don't ask...) by their pilots, absolutely ruled the Karelian skies in the beginning of Continuation War.
One, of the Brewsters, BW-364, was credited with 42½ kills in total by all pilots operating it, possibly making it the highest-scoring fighter airframe in the history of air warfare.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewster_F2...lo#Finland
More about this plane, BW-372, in particular:
http://www.airforcemuseum.fi/brewster_arrived_finland
Salvaging the wreck:
http://heninen.net/brewster/english.htm
From the above link:
"In Finland fighters was provided by an extra armor around pilot seat (by Winter War experience)"
Good thing they did !!! The pilot was very lucky to escape with his life, as a heavy caliber hit had pierced the added armour from behind the pilots chair, the chair itself broken into half as well:
Hope you enjoy these pictures! Cheers
EDIT: I found out there's a 360 multimedia of the ehibition:
http://www.airforcemuseum.fi/flash.asp?file=1