Hi Lads..
Made a trip this week to Scotlands not-so-secret Bunker, the Regional War Room (NZ) just outside Anstruther. It's now a cold war musem. I'd recommend it. Packed with genuine bits a pieces from the various guises of the facility over the years. Plenty of good stuff on the ROC and the nuclear preparations. £9 odd for a good couple of hours, so it's not the usual tourist rip-off.
Snaps:
The topside Rotor Guard House, which doubles as the entrance and the shop. Curious, these deliberately non-descript buidlings, anyone know why the roof profiles are so high pitched? Something to do with the vent in the dormer?

The main entrance tunnel, enhanced by some (non-original) nifty flourescent lighting.

Plotting boards for fallout prediction amongst other things. Most of the exhibits in the museum are sourced from other bunkers/collectors I believe. When bought it was bare, after the MOD/RAF left.

Radar displays originating from RAF Buchan. Used to track those Russain snoopers over the North Sea.

The GPO Frame Room, for those of a telecoms disposition...

A great collection on telecoms history in the Frame Room. Plently of information on the old WB (Warning Broadcast?) systems, which would have given us all a few minutes warning of nuclear obliteration.

A soviet designed air-to-air missile. Couldn't help but wonder where the museum got hold of this..

A couple of what I think are RN tracking radars, rusting around the car park.

No cold war snoop is complete without the obligatory ROC Post hunt. After the bunker I headed off to find Gauldry ROC, located on the edge of a field in Northern Fife. Very overgrown, it took me 3 attempts to spot the entrance. Sorry not a great collection of snaps, some Farmer Palmer decided to start shooting at something and I'm not 100% sure it wasn't me. He also scared the bejesus out of my dug, so one snap to show the lids been ripped well off then a sharp exit. Didn't get a chance to get the torch out and climb down.
