Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The strength of the Army Air Corps is about 2,000 regular personnel, of which 500 are officers. However, the AAC draws an additional 2,600 personnel from the Royal Logistic Corps, the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers and the Adjutant General's Corps. [29] Therefore, total related Army Air Corps personnel is around 4,600. [30]
This is a list of airfields of the military aviation division of the British Army, the Army Air Corps, from 1 September 1957. This transport-related list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items .
Royal Air Force flying training and support units since 1912. Tonbridge, UK: Air-Britain (Historians). ISBN 978-0851-3036-59. Watson, G; Rinaldi, R (2005). The British Army in Germany: An Organizational History 1947–2004. Tiger Lily Publications. ISBN 0-9720296-9-9
The 1st Aviation Brigade Combat Team is an aviation formation of the British Army. [3] Most of its units are from the Army Air Corps (AAC). It was stood up on 1 April 2020 by combining the Wattisham Flying Station Headquarters (WFS HQ), formerly the Attack Helicopter Force (AHF) at Wattisham and the Aviation Reconnaissance Force at the Royal Naval Air Station Yeovilton.
Saunders-Roe Skeeter – First helicopter used by Army Air Corps [15] Sud Aviation Alouette II [16] Westland Lynx [17] Westland Scout [18] Westland Sioux [19] Bell 212 – Used by 25 Flight AAC at British Army Training Unit Kenya; Airbus H135 [20] – was to replace the Gazelle in the surveillance role. However, the MoD decided that they were ...
6 Regiment Army Air Corps is the sole Army Reserve regiment of the British Army Air Corps (AAC). The regiment consists of four Squadrons based around the south of the UK. 6 Regiment provides soldiers trained to assist Joint Aviation Command on exercise and operations both in the UK and worldwide. The regiment provides support to support and ...
1 Regiment Army Air Corps; 1st Aviation Brigade Combat Team (United Kingdom) 2 (Training) Regiment Army Air Corps; 3 Regiment Army Air Corps; 4 Regiment Army Air Corps; 5 Regiment Army Air Corps; 6 Regiment Army Air Corps; 7 (Training) Regiment Army Air Corps; 9 Regiment Army Air Corps; No. 673 Squadron AAC
Army Air Corps (United Kingdom), the army aviation element of the British Army Philippine Army Air Corps (1935–1941) United States Army Air Corps (1926–1942), or its predecessors or successors