These walk-around photos were taken at Västerås Flygmuseum in 2017. They show a de Havilland DH.115 Vampire T.11, registered SE-DXX and displayed as a Swedish Air Force J 28C fighter — a sister aircraft to SE-DXU at the same museum, both wearing fictitious Swedish markings. This aircraft is displayed in the silver colour scheme and markings typical of F 1 Hässlö, the wing based at the very airfield where the museum now stands, and numbered 106.
Built at Christchurch in 1953 as c/n 15149, it entered RAF service as WZ570 and later served with the Swiss Air Force as U-1236 until retirement. In 1993 it was acquired by a Swedish owner and registered SE-DXX. Like its companion SE-DXU, it was painted to represent a J 28C and has been on display at Västerås Flygmuseum since the museum opened in 1999 — a fitting tribute to the type that once flew from this very airfield with F 1, and which in Swedish service became the jet fighter flown by more pilots than any other type.