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The 556th Test and Evaluation Squadron is the Air Force's first operational test squadron for unmanned aircraft. It provides support to UAS operations worldwide, through force development evaluations, the development of training, tactics and procedures, systems expertise and meeting warfighters' urgent need requests.
The Aviation Heritage Museum is a museum located in the Perth suburb of Bull Creek in Western Australia. [1] Created and maintained by the Air Force Association [a] of Western Australia, it houses many military and civilian aircraft, aircraft replicas and aircraft engines, of types that have served in the Royal Australian Air Force or that have relevance to aviation in Western Australia.
The squadron was first activated during World War II as the 556th Bombardment Squadron, a Martin B-26 Marauder unit. After training in the southeastern United States, it deployed to the European Theater of Operations , where it conducted operations until April 1945, earning a Distinguished Unit Citation during the Battle of the Bulge .
4677th Defense System Evaluation Squadron, Detachment 1, Holloman AFB, New Mexico (RB-57D) Re-designated: 17th Defense Systems Evaluation Squadron Hill AFB, Utah, 1959–1972 Malmstrom AFB, Montana, 1972–1979. 5040th Radar Evaluation Squadron (EB-57B) (AAC) (10th AD) Re-designated: 5070th System Evaluation Squadron Elmendorf AFB, Alaska, 1957 ...
The base unit was redescribed as the 556th AAF Base Unit (Ferrying Group) then discontinued after the end of World War II on 1 December 1946. The 6th Ferrying Group was reconstituted and redesignated the 546th Tactical Airlift Group on 31 July 1985, but remained inactive.
The other predecessor of the 556th is the 656th Bombardment Squadron, a Strategic Air Command unit that flew Boeing B-47 Stratojets at Chennault Air Force Base, Louisiana from 1953 to 1963. The two squadrons were consolidated as the 556th in 1985.
Canberra T.4, an example of a three-seat, dual-control model employed for conversion training at No. 1 OCU. During World War II, the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) established several operational training units (OTUs) to convert recently graduated pilots from advanced trainers to combat aircraft, and to add fighting ability to the flying skills they had already learned.
Squadron Leader Terence Malcolm Bulloch, DSO* DFC* (19 February 1916 – 13 November 2014) was a Royal Air Force Coastal Command pilot during the Second World War.He carried out the highest number of attacks on U-boats during the Battle of the Atlantic, sinking a record total of three (U-597, U-611 and U-514).