Some notes:
1.) I was sort of short on time.
2.) Running out of space - I only had like 30-40 pictures left on my SD card; I had used up an entire card earlier, and most of the second card's space on previous stuff, So I couldn't just snap pictures of EVERYTHING.
3.) I had no tripod - and I was handholding things so not all of my photos turned out well. But I did pretty good.

Outside of Museum. It's a converted factory, giving them lots of space.

Objective Interim Lightweight Marmoset Monotank.

Towed Gatling display circa Spanish American War.

Bet you wish you had all these as a kid, eh?

GUNZ

What they did was they converted the former office space into self-contained exhibit rooms.

*Barks*

DEATH or Ace, translation required.

A RKKA Tank leader styling in his duds

POLES

BEST WEAPON EVAR.

One of the exhibit halls.

37mm PAK with exterior stick bomb shape charge grenade

The M114. The M113's retarded brother which ate paint chips.

Swedish Medium Tank of WWII, with the modernized turret they got in the 1950s.

M59 or M75 (not sure), that's undergoing restoration.

Bradley put together from two hulks found on firing ranges -- this is the only bradley in a museum other than the prototype at Aberdeen.

Scorpion TD.

60" US WW2 searchlight. And yes, it still works.

M1917 light tank. Basically US Produced Renault FT-17; very rare; sice most were scrapped after WWI, and a lot of survivors were cut up in WWII for war scrap drives.

Sergeant York DIVAD! Second Most AWesome Weapon Evar.

M551 in process of restoration

M42 DUSTER

M103 heavy tank. Because Marines don't need mobility.

T-34 in it's natural environment -- the rubble of nazi germany.

Mechanical Mule with 106mm Recoilless Rifle

Back of a 25mm M242 Bushmaster cannon, showing indicator of what part of it's firing cycle it's in

M108 SP Howitzer. This is the M109's retarded brother. A mere 105mm, it died very fast.

M60A2 "Starship". This one actually runs. They crushed a car with it at a recent museum festival.

Panzer IV. This is not a Nazi Murder Machine, but a Syrian Murder Machine, captured by the Israelis. Traded to the AAF museum via a trade with the IDF Armored Corps Museum at Latrun.

HONEST JOHN!

Towed VADS

NIKE HERCULES


The museum has a huge 1/35 scale map of a belgian town for staging awesome R/C tank battles.

That's a AH-1S Huey Cobra with the rare dual 40mm grenade launcher turret fitted.

Iraqi T-72A captured in 1991; you can see how they have a lot of space for more exhibits, or restoration tear down work.

Swiss Military Bicycle. This was designed in like 1993 or 1995 to replace aging Model 1905 bicycles for which spares were becoming hard to find. 30 year life required. This was acquired when the soldier who had it was allowed to keep it when the last bicycle units were disbanded in 2004.