The King will be treated to an extended military flypast later after his Coronation day display had to be scaled down due to bad weather.
Around 70 aircraft from the Royal Navy, British Army and Royal Air Force will take part in the six-minute display, taking off from 15 locations across the UK before meeting in the south-east of England to fly across London.
We’ll see a mix of aircraft, ranging from the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight dating back to the 1940s and the C-130 Hercules on its final ceremonial flight to multiple Typhoon fighter jets and the Envoy IV CC1, which is making its flypast debut.
At the front will be a Juno HT1 piloted by Flight Lieutenant Tom Knapp from 60 Squadron, No 1 Flying Training School based at RAF Shawbury.
The event will end in the traditional show of red, white and blue from the pilots of the Red Arrows.
Gloomy weather put a dampener on Coronation celebrations. More than 60 aircraft from the Royal Navy, British Army and Royal Air Force had been due to take part in the flypast but “unsuitable weather conditions” forced the plan to be abandoned.