Managed to get a photo shoot in courtesy a work trip and paid a visit to the Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum. Hidden away in the middle of East Anglia, this is a great little museum with a lot packed in and as every with most of the smaller museums, friendly talkative staff. Better still, the sun shone, we had blue skies and hence good light!
My main reason to visit was their Lightning F1 which as well as being part of the early development batch also acted as a chase aircraft during TSR2 development. They also have a Jet Provost in an unusual colour scheme, one of only two Vickers Valetta still around and for anyone with an interest in the electronics fitted to aircraft over the years, a goodly assortment to demonstrate how much this has progressed in the last 50+ years.
One oddity we weren’t expecting is in the photo. The shape of the fuselage frame gives it away straight off, it’s part of a TSR2 and is the locating frame for both the vertical and horizontal tail surfaces. The thickness of the bearers onto which the moving surfaces mount just shows how large the forces acting on the control surfaces would be when at low level and high speed.