From cold war to cold storage: The last Vulcan goes into '˜hibernation'
The 57-year-old nuclear craft XH558 flew for the last time in October 2015. Since then, 1,000 people a month have visited its hangar at Doncaster airport.
It lost its permit to fly 18 months ago but the Vulcan To The Sky Trust, which restored it to flight a decade ago, still hopes to build a visitor attraction around it. In the meantime, said chief executive Robert Pleming, it was going into “hibernation”.
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Hide AdDr Pleming said: “I’m really confident that in about a year’s time we’ll be able to move into that new facility.
“In effect, the aircraft is hibernating for the time being.”
Dr Pleming took the “bitter decision” last month to reduce the trust’s team from 22 to eight full-time staff.
Engineering director Andrew Edmondson, one of the world’s leading specialists in vintage jet restoration, is being retained along with chief engineer Taff Stone, who is responsible for the ongoing care of XH558.
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Hide AdDr Pleming said that maintaining the aircraft, along with the trust’s Canberra WK163, in the new storage location is expected to cost around £200,000.
The trust said half has been match-funded by a group of philanthropists but an appeal has been launched for the rest.
The airport is providing the storage facility free until the end of April.
XH558 was built in 1960 and entered service with the RAF in the role of carrying Britain’s nuclear deterrent to the heart of the Soviet Union.
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Hide AdIt was the last Vulcan to fly as an RAF aircraft in 1992 and was brought back into service in 2008.
But XH558 lost its permit to fly at the end of October 2015 as the engineering firms who helped keep it in the air accepted they no longer have the 1950s’ skills available to ensure safety.
Despite being built as nuclear bombers, the Vulcans’ most famous mission was in 1982 when they bombed the runway at Port Stanley during the Falklands War - a raid which has gone down in military history due to the complex multiple refuelling operation needed over such huge distances.
Such was the popularity of XH558, its final flight was kept secret so fans would not bring operations to a halt at the airport.
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Hide AdSteve Gill, chief executive at the airport, said: “Having the Vulcan based here is a big part of our history and we want to see it remain here long into the future.
“We continue to work closely with the trust on plans for a new hangar to hold the aircraft for which a possible site has been identified.”