I was a volunteer at the museum for a while in 2003 and 4 until my work schedule kinda screwed things up. I learned pretty quickly that a lot of them don't know much about what goes on in there, and frequently give out false info. That is probably why Corsairfreak didn't get any answers on the He-111. And to be honest, I didn't know much about it,either. But I do have two short stories that are rather humorous.
I was down there one day just walking around with my wife when I happened to overhear one of the volunteers explaining to a visitor how the YF-22 flew to the museum. He gave a pretty good performance. Except he was totally wrong. This particular 22 had been brought to the Dayton Air Show (not flown) after having crashed and been rebuilt to static (I forget which year....98 maybe?). After the show it was towed via US Route 40 and State Route 4 to permanent residency at the museum. The Raptor that DID fly to the base a couple of years later was to be used for live-fire testing and is not the one on display.
One day last year when I was volunteering in the Cold War Gallery, a visitor asked me why the B-1B had two different serial numbers on it. I looked , and sure enough the number stenciled under the pilot's window (which matched the tail) was different from the one under the co-pilot's window. Not just by a single digit, totally different. I asked the guy at the desk and he had no idea. He asked someone else, and pretty soon we heard others on the radio asking about it. Apparently no one knew or ever found out. Less than two weeks later the numbers on the co-pilot's side were gone. If you check it out now and look from the right angle, you can see how the grey is slightly lighter where the numbers used to be.
A great lesson in life.....if you can't come up with the correct answer, remove the question
