Sacheon Airport

Sacheon Airport
사천공항
泗川空港

Sacheon Gonghang
Sach'ŏn Konghang
Summary
Airport type Military/Public
Operator Korean Airports Corporation, Republic of Korea Airforce
Serves Sacheon, Jinju
Location Sacheon, South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea
Elevation AMSL 8 m / 25 ft
Coordinates 35°05′18.75″N 128°04′13.33″E / 35.0885417°N 128.0703694°E / 35.0885417; 128.0703694
Website
Map
HIN

Location of airport in South Korea

Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
06R/24L 2,743 9,000 Concrete
06L/24R 2,743 9,000 Concrete
Statistics (2011)
Passengers 169,120
Source:airport-information.com[1]

Sacheon Airport is an airport in Sacheon, South Korea (IATA: HIN, ICAO: RKPS). It also serves the city of Jinju. The airport passenger service began in 1977 after years of delays. The airport has a small single story terminal building for domestic flights within South Korea. In 2011, 143,483 passengers utilized the airport.

Airlines & destinations

Sacheon is a domestic airport with only two airlines serving to and from this airport. Direct flights are from Jeju and Seoul-Gimpo only.

AirlinesDestinations
Asiana AirlinesJeju
Korean AirJeju, Seoul–Gimpo

Transportation

Besides private cars and taxi, the airport is connected by buses(No.75 and No.95) to Jinju and Sacheon. The airport is accessed via Gonghangdero Expressway.

Tenants

Korea Express Air began chartered flights from Jeju to Jinju in 2011.[2]

The airport is also the home of Korea Aerospace Industries, which manufactures military aircraft, and satellites. The T-50 trainers used by the Sacheon Air Base are manufactured by the company on the north side of the airport.

Air Base

Korean War

During the Korean War the USAF designated the base K-4.

The Base was used as part of the USAF's Bout One project to train South Korean pilots to fly the F-51 in 1950.

The ROKAF 10th Fighter Wing was formed at the base in 1951.

Postwar

The Republic of Korea Air Force operates from Sacheon using trainers and test aircraft at Jinju, which is home to the Republic of Korea Air Force Education and Training Command since 1998. Hangars for the trainers are found on the north and south sides of the airport.

Two 366th Tactical Fighter Wing EF-111 Ravens taxi at Sacheon during Exercise Team Spirit '85

On 13 November 2003 a KAI KT-1 crashed shortly after takeoff from the base, the instructor ejected safely while the trainee was killed.[3]

See also

References

  1. "South Korea Traffic Statistics". airport-information.com.
  2. Korea Joongang Daily. Mengnews.joinsmsn.com (2011-10-13). Retrieved on 2013-07-12.
  3. "Chronological Listing of South Korean Losses & Ejections". Ejection-history.org.uk. Retrieved 23 June 2013.

 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Air Force website http://www.af.mil.

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