MoD Boscombe Down

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MoD Boscombe Down
IATA: N/A - ICAO: EGDM
Summary
Airport type Military
Operator QinetiQ
Serves Amesbury
Elevation AMSL 407 ft (124 m)
Coordinates 51°09′08″N, 001°44′51″W
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
05/23 10,538 3,212 Concrete/Asphalt
17/35 6,278 1,914 Concrete/Asphalt

MoD Boscombe Down (IATA: N/AICAO: EGDM) is an aircraft testing site located south of Amesbury, Wiltshire, England. It is run and managed by QinetiQ, the Public-private partnership company created as part of the break up of DERA in 2001 by the UK Ministry of Defence.

Formerly the Aircraft and Armament Evaluation Establishment (A&AEE) - previously the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment - the site has witnessed many significant developments in the British aviation industry including trials of many aircraft flown by the British armed forces since the Second World War notably the first flights of the English Electric P1 forerunner of the Lightning and the BAC TSR.2. It was also formerly home to the School of Aviation Medicine. Responsibility for the site passed from the MoD Procurement Executive to the Defence Test and Evaluation Organisation (DTEO) in 1993, and subsequently to the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency in 1995.

With the creation of QinetiQ in 2001 Boscombe Down was handed over on a 25 year Long Term Partnering Agreement (LTPA) with responsibility for testing all future MoD aircraft. There are still military personnel stationed at Boscombe Down who work with QinetiQ as part of the testing and development processes, including flying the aircraft themselves.

The site has two runways, one approximately three kilometres in length and the second 1.8 kilometres, and is located at 51.155 N, 1.750 W. It is also currently home to the Southampton University Air Squadron [1] and Empire Test Pilots School [2].

Boscombe Down has been associated with rumours concerning US black projects. One notable incident is reported to have occurred there in 1994, although evidence is patchy and very unreliable. [3].

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