RAAF Base Tindal

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RAAF Base Tindal
IATA: KTR - ICAO: YPTN
Summary
Airport type Military
Operator RAAF / Katherine Town Council
Serves Katherine, Northern Territory
Elevation AMSL 443 ft (145 m)
Coordinates 14°31′18″S, 132°22′42″E
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
14/32 9,003 2,744 Asphalt
Tindal redirects here. For the English and Australian Tindal family, see Tyndall.

RAAF Base Tindal (RAAF Tindal) (IATA: KTRICAO: YPTN) is a Royal Australian Air Force air base located near the town of Katherine in the Northern Territory. The base is currently home to No. 75 Squadron and a number of non-flying units.

Contents

[edit] History

RAAF Tindal was initially built for the RAAF as Carson's Airfield, also known as Kit Carson's Field, in 1942. The airfield was constructed by the 43rd Engineer General Services Regiment (US Army) and the Civil Construction Corps. Further works were undertaken by No. 1 Airfield Construction Squadron RAAF and No. 3 Airfield Construction Squadron RAAF.

The airfield was renamed in honour of Wing Commander Archibald R. Tindal, the first RAAF Officer killied in action on the Australian mainland during the bombing of Darwin on 19 February 1942.[1][2] Tindal is buried at the Adelaide River war cemetery.[1]

The airfield was later occupied by No. 5 Replenishing Centre RAAF. The RAAF ceased basing operational units at the airfield following the end of World War II.

Between 1963 and 1970 No. 5 Airfield Construction Squadron RAAF rebuilt the runway, taxiways and hard stand to handle larger, more modern aircraft and enable the base to operate as a 'bare base'. In 1968 it was opened as Katherine's domestic airport, being used by Ansett-ANA, TAA and Conellen. The base was occasionally used by units based at RAAF Base Darwin and other bases.

In 1984 the Australian government decided to move the RAAF's fast jet base in the Northern Territory from RAAF Darwin to Tindal. This move was intended to provide the RAAF with a base which was outside the cyclone zone and easier to defend against external attack. After a major upgrade RAAF Tindal officially opened on 1 October 1988.[1]

Since its establishment RAAF Tindal has served as the RAAF's main operational base in the Northern Territory. The base regularly hosts other units for exercises and was used to support the Australian lead intervention into East Timor in 1999.[1]

In keeping with Tindal's role as a front-line operational air base, it is one of the few Australian defence establishments to be manned exclusively by uniformed personnel. In addition, the base has more defensive installations than is common in Australian air bases and can host hundreds of ground troops.

[edit] Units

Unit name FEG Aircraft
No. 44 Wing Detachment Tindal Surveillance and Response Group
No. 75 Squadron Air Combat Group F/A-18
No. 278 Squadron Detachment Tindal Air Combat Group
No. 1 Air Terminal Squadron Detachment Tindal Combat Support Group
No. 322 Combat Support Squadron Combat Support Group
No. 114 Mobile Control and Reporting Unit Detachment Tindal Surveillance and Response Group

A detachment of two Boeing Wedgetail AWACS aircraft from No. 2 Squadron will be based at Tindal after these aircraft are delivered in 2009.

In addition, the Army's NORFORCE Regional Force Surveillance Unit has a detachment located at Tindal.

[edit] Airlines and destinations

  • Aboriginal Air Services (Darwin, Victoria River Downs)

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Tindal: A history. Air Force news. Retrieved on 21 August 2007.
  2. ^ Territory Images External Search: 15378. Northern Territory Library and Information Service. Retrieved on 21 August 2007.

[edit] External links