Royal Air Force Benson | |||
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IATA: BEX – ICAO: EGUB | |||
Summary | |||
Airport type | Military | ||
Owner | Ministry of Defence | ||
Operator | Royal Air Force | ||
Location | Benson, Oxfordshire | ||
Elevation AMSL | 226 ft / 69 m | ||
Coordinates | |||
Website | |||
Map | |||
EGUB
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Runways | |||
Direction | Length | Surface | |
m | ft | ||
01/19 | 1,823 | 5,981 | Asphalt |
RAF Benson (IATA: BEX, ICAO: EGUB) is a Royal Air Force station near Benson in South Oxfordshire, England. It is home to the Royal Air Force's support helicopters, the Aérospatiale Puma and the EH-101 Merlin, known as the Puma HC.Mk 1 and the Merlin HC.Mk 3 and Mk 3a.
Benson is currently home to 28 Squadron, 78 Squadron, 33 Squadron, 230 Squadron and also to Oxford University Air Squadron and No. 6 Air Experience Flight. In January 2008, 78 Squadron was formally stood up at RAF Benson to create, alongside 28 Squadron, a Merlin Force. Also included in the Merlin Force is the Merlin Force Engineering Squadron. No 78 Sqn were previously a Sea King/Chinook Squadron based at RAF Mount Pleasant in the Falkland Islands). In November 2009, 230 Squadron with its Puma helicopters took residence here having been posted to RAF Station Aldergrove, in Northern Ireland since the early 1990s. Previous units once located there include the Queen's Flight.
The Chiltern Air Support Unit helicopter (a Eurocopter EC135) and the Thames Valley and Chiltern air ambulance helicopter (a Eurocopter EC 135, call sign "Helimed24") are also both located here as lodger units. The Old Station Nursery is also located on the domestic site at Benson - it is open to all families from the RAF station and the local civilian community (for further information go to www.theoldstationnursery.co.uk).
The airfield is a well-known frost hollow, often recording the coldest temperatures in the UK. In early 2009 the Met Office at RAF Benson recorded a temperature of -11.8 degrees, and on 7 January 2010, -17.1 degrees.
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Building work for RAF Benson began in 1937. RAF Benson was officially opened on Saturday 1 April 1939 and its first aircraft were two squadrons of Fairey Battle light bombers which began to arrive a few days later.[1] No. 103 Squadron RAF started flying in on 3 April 1939, to be joined in the next few months by No. 150 Squadron RAF.
The Battles were replaced in December 1940 with Vickers Wellington medium bombers. At the same time the Spitfires of No. 1 Photographic Reconnaissance Unit RAF an RAF Coastal Command unit arrived. It gained considerable fame as the home of photographic reconnaissance for the remainder of World War II.[2] In June 1943, No 1 PRU was formed into No 106 Wing, with five squadrons (No’s 540 to 544 inclusive) and an Operational Training Unit.[3] The Wing was elevated to as the No 106 (PU) Group status in April 1944, with two Mosquito and two Spitfire Squadrons (No 543 Squadron having been disbanded when the aircraft strength per Squadron was increased). The No 106 Group was assigned to the Coastal Command's Photo Reconnaissance assets with the whole of Northern Europe as its operational area.[4]
Its Supermarine Spitfire and de Havilland Mosquito aircraft flew missions over occupied Europe, for example bringing back battle damage assessment pictures after Operation Chastise. This period of the station's history is reflected in the use of a full-scale replica of a wartime Spitfire PR.Mk XI on the main gate - this having replaced a genuine Spitfire PR.MK XIX that has been restored to flying status. Vera Lynn, 'the forces Sweetheart', visited RAF Benson to entertain the troops, reportedly singing "The White Cliffs of Dover" at the station.
The station retained a reconnaisance role for some years after the war, with Avro Lancaster, Spitfire, Mosquito, Gloster Meteor PR.Mk 10 and English Electric Canberra PR.Mk 3 aircraft.
On 1 June 1962 No. 105 Squadron RAF reformed at the station, flying Armstrong Whitworth AW.660 Argosys as part of the RAF Transport Command fleet. In January 1968, 114[5] and 267 Squadrons were flying Argosys as a Wing on the station.
The King's Flight moved from RAF Hendon and would stay (renamed as the Queen's Flight after the death of King George VI) until after the war, moving to RAF Northolt in 1995.
The station is today the home to four squadrons of Support Helicopters, 28 Squadron, 78 Squadron with Merlin helicopters and 33 Squadron and 230 Squadron with Puma helicopters. RAF Benson is also home to the Grob Tutor light aircraft of the Oxford University Air Squadron RAF. Also a flying club exists at RAF Benson which consists of service and civilian personnel. Massive investment has been made in a modern flight simulator facility for the Chinook (not located at Benson), Merlin and Puma. RAF Benson is now also home to a mobile Catering Support Unit and the Chiltern Air Support Unit (Police) bases one of its Eurocopter EC 135 helicopters at Benson. A yellow MBB Bo 105 belonging to the Thames Valley & Chiltern Air Ambulance Trust (headquartered at Grove Park), Maidenhead, moved from White Waltham to Benson in January 2007.
The future of RAF Benson was in doubt for some time, while Project Belvedere was looking into closing at least one of Joint Helicopter Command's airfields. These included Benson, Odiham, Aldergrove, Yeovilton, Middle Wallop, Wattisham and Dishforth; with the Support Helicopters based at RAF Benson being considered for a move to RAF Lyneham. Belvedere has been abandoned on cost grounds, and Benson's future is now believed to be safe.