Engine Run walk around and inside cockpit of Avro Shackleton Mk3 WR982 "J" Gatwick aviation museum
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Huge thank you to Nev Feist former Navigator of this aircraft for showing me around and helping to make this video . Here is the link for his Some personal memories http://www.nrf37.co.uk/Shack/
Engine start and run English Electric Lightning https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kN2UxiL2NBc
Gatwick Aviation Museum is at http://www.gatwick-aviation-museum.co.uk
The Avro Shackleton was a British long-range maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) used by the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the South African Air Force (SAAF). It was developed by Avro from the Avro Lincoln bomber, which itself has been a development of the famous wartime Avro Lancaster bomber.
The Shackleton was developed during the late 1940s as part of Britain's military response to the rapid expansion of the Soviet Navy, in particular its submarine force. Produced as the primary type equipping RAF Coastal Command, the Type 696, as it was initially designated, incorporated major elements of the Lincoln, as well as the Avro Tudor passenger aircraft, and was furnished with extensive electronics suites in order to perform the anti-submarine warfare (ASW) mission along with a much improved crew environment to accommodate the long mission times involved in patrol work. Being known for a short time as the Lincoln ASR.3, it was decided that the Type 696 would be named Shackleton in service, after the polar explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton