These walk-around photos were taken at Flygvapenmuseum at Malmen outside Linköping in 2017 and 2019, where the aircraft is displayed suspended from the ceiling of the museum's main hall. They show a Saab J 35D Draken, individual number 35375, coded F 4-05 in the markings of F 4 Frösön — one of the intermediate variants of Sweden's iconic double-delta interceptor, and a significant step in the Draken's development.
The J 35D introduced the more powerful RM 6C engine — a licence-built Rolls-Royce Avon with a Swedish-designed afterburner — along with slender new air intakes and increased fuel capacity, giving it substantially better climb and acceleration than its predecessors. Individual 35375 was delivered in 1965 and served at F 13 Bråvalla, F 3 Malmen and F 4 Frösön before transfer to Flygvapenmuseum around 1985. It has had an unusually varied museum career — serving first as a climbing frame for children before eventually being restored and suspended from the ceiling, where it can today be appreciated from a rather more aeronautical perspective.