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Tel Nof Airbase AI simulator
(@Tel Nof Airbase_simulator)
Hub AI
Tel Nof Airbase AI simulator
(@Tel Nof Airbase_simulator)
Tel Nof Airbase
Tel Nof Airbase (Hebrew: בָּסִיס חֵיל-הַאֲוִויר תֵּל נוֹף, English: Lookout hill) (ICAO: LLEK), also known as Air Force Base 8, is the oldest and main base of the Israeli Air Force (IAF) located 5 km south of Rehovot, Israel. Tel Nof houses two strike fighter, two transport helicopter and a UAV squadron. Also located on the base are the Flight Test Center Manat and several special units of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), among others Unit 669 (heliborne Combat Search and Rescue, CSAR) and the Paratroopers Brigade training center and its headquarters. See also: Units.
Established in the spring of 1941 as RAF Aqir during the British Mandate for Palestine, it served as the main base for the Royal Air Force (RAF) in Palestine. It was named after the Arab village Aqir north of it that perished in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War and was located in the area of today's Kiryat Ekron.
After the British withdrawal from RAF Aqir in May 1948, the base was taken over by the newly founded Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and renamed Ekron Airbase – after the biblical city of Ekron and today's Kiryat Ekron 1 km north of it – and, from 1950, Tel Nof Airbase (English: Lookout hill). The name "Tel Nof" dates back to the 1930s, when the area was known by this name as an urban development area, similar to the then-thriving "Tel Aviv" (English: Spring hill).
During the Arab–Israeli War on 29 May 1948, the first four fighter aircraft Avia S-199 of the first squadron 101 "First Fighter" of the new Israeli Air Force (IAF) took off from here for their first mission, an attack on the Ad Halom Bridge in the eastern outskirts of Ashdod, which was in the hands of Egyptian troops, who advanced on Tel Aviv. Important was less the modest military success of this operation – one plane was shot down – than the shock to the Egyptian soldiers when they saw with their own eyes that Israel now had an Air Force with the Star of David on it (see photo of plaque in gallery below). The advance was delayed, and this gave the Israeli army (IDF) enough time to bring in troops and stop it.
On 17 August 1948, Ekron Airbase (later Tel Nof Airbase) was officially and ceremoniously opened. Hatzor Airbase and Ramat David Airbase taken over from the British soon followed. After the Avia S-199 – imported from Czechoslovakia and a replica of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 made out of parts left over from German war production – additional fighter aircraft were acquired from the stocks of the former Allies, such as the British Supermarine Spitfire and the North American P-51 Mustang. The IAF Flight Academy, which was initially based at Camp Sirkin east of Petah Tikva, was established at Tel Nof in 1955 until it was relocated to the then newly built Hatzerim Airbase in 1966, where it still is today.
The 119 Squadron "Bat" was established in 1956, initially at Ramat David Airbase and was intended to fly night missions with jets (hence the name "Bat"). It received used Gloster Meteor NF.13 (two-seat night fighters) from the Royal Air Force, with which it shortly thereafter took part in the combat operations of the Suez Crisis. To bring the squadron closer to its primary operational area in Egypt, it was relocated to Tel Nof at the end of 1957 and the following year received several new SO-4050 Vautours from the French manufacturer Sud-Ouest. In 1963, the 119 Squadron "Bat" was temporarily decommissioned and its jets transferred to squadrons at Ramat David.
In 1964, the 119 Squadron was reopened at Tel Nof with new French Dassault Mirage IIICJ Shahak fighter jets, which later flew over 300 missions in the Six-Day War, shooting down 23 enemy aircraft. In 1970, the Mirage jets were transferred to other squadrons and US-made F-4E Phantom II Kurnass strike fighter jets were acquired, which soon took part in the Yom Kippur War.
At the beginning of the Palestine War in late 1947, ten Curtiss C-46 Commando cargo aircraft were purchased from the US Air Force inventory and eventually stationed at Ekron Airbase. They formed the backbone of the transport fleet of the newly founded Israeli Air Force and were consolidated in December 1948 with the formation of the 106 Squadron "Spearhead". During the war, these aircraft transported equipment and supplies to the troops and settlers in the Negev Desert in southern Israel and also carried out occasional bombing raids. Important landing sites for supply flights were the Ruhama Airfield 12 km southeast of Sderot (31°27′43″N 34°43′11″E / 31.461891°N 34.719622°E) and the Malhata Airfield 20 km east of Beersheba, today's Nevatim Airbase.
Tel Nof Airbase
Tel Nof Airbase (Hebrew: בָּסִיס חֵיל-הַאֲוִויר תֵּל נוֹף, English: Lookout hill) (ICAO: LLEK), also known as Air Force Base 8, is the oldest and main base of the Israeli Air Force (IAF) located 5 km south of Rehovot, Israel. Tel Nof houses two strike fighter, two transport helicopter and a UAV squadron. Also located on the base are the Flight Test Center Manat and several special units of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), among others Unit 669 (heliborne Combat Search and Rescue, CSAR) and the Paratroopers Brigade training center and its headquarters. See also: Units.
Established in the spring of 1941 as RAF Aqir during the British Mandate for Palestine, it served as the main base for the Royal Air Force (RAF) in Palestine. It was named after the Arab village Aqir north of it that perished in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War and was located in the area of today's Kiryat Ekron.
After the British withdrawal from RAF Aqir in May 1948, the base was taken over by the newly founded Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and renamed Ekron Airbase – after the biblical city of Ekron and today's Kiryat Ekron 1 km north of it – and, from 1950, Tel Nof Airbase (English: Lookout hill). The name "Tel Nof" dates back to the 1930s, when the area was known by this name as an urban development area, similar to the then-thriving "Tel Aviv" (English: Spring hill).
During the Arab–Israeli War on 29 May 1948, the first four fighter aircraft Avia S-199 of the first squadron 101 "First Fighter" of the new Israeli Air Force (IAF) took off from here for their first mission, an attack on the Ad Halom Bridge in the eastern outskirts of Ashdod, which was in the hands of Egyptian troops, who advanced on Tel Aviv. Important was less the modest military success of this operation – one plane was shot down – than the shock to the Egyptian soldiers when they saw with their own eyes that Israel now had an Air Force with the Star of David on it (see photo of plaque in gallery below). The advance was delayed, and this gave the Israeli army (IDF) enough time to bring in troops and stop it.
On 17 August 1948, Ekron Airbase (later Tel Nof Airbase) was officially and ceremoniously opened. Hatzor Airbase and Ramat David Airbase taken over from the British soon followed. After the Avia S-199 – imported from Czechoslovakia and a replica of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 made out of parts left over from German war production – additional fighter aircraft were acquired from the stocks of the former Allies, such as the British Supermarine Spitfire and the North American P-51 Mustang. The IAF Flight Academy, which was initially based at Camp Sirkin east of Petah Tikva, was established at Tel Nof in 1955 until it was relocated to the then newly built Hatzerim Airbase in 1966, where it still is today.
The 119 Squadron "Bat" was established in 1956, initially at Ramat David Airbase and was intended to fly night missions with jets (hence the name "Bat"). It received used Gloster Meteor NF.13 (two-seat night fighters) from the Royal Air Force, with which it shortly thereafter took part in the combat operations of the Suez Crisis. To bring the squadron closer to its primary operational area in Egypt, it was relocated to Tel Nof at the end of 1957 and the following year received several new SO-4050 Vautours from the French manufacturer Sud-Ouest. In 1963, the 119 Squadron "Bat" was temporarily decommissioned and its jets transferred to squadrons at Ramat David.
In 1964, the 119 Squadron was reopened at Tel Nof with new French Dassault Mirage IIICJ Shahak fighter jets, which later flew over 300 missions in the Six-Day War, shooting down 23 enemy aircraft. In 1970, the Mirage jets were transferred to other squadrons and US-made F-4E Phantom II Kurnass strike fighter jets were acquired, which soon took part in the Yom Kippur War.
At the beginning of the Palestine War in late 1947, ten Curtiss C-46 Commando cargo aircraft were purchased from the US Air Force inventory and eventually stationed at Ekron Airbase. They formed the backbone of the transport fleet of the newly founded Israeli Air Force and were consolidated in December 1948 with the formation of the 106 Squadron "Spearhead". During the war, these aircraft transported equipment and supplies to the troops and settlers in the Negev Desert in southern Israel and also carried out occasional bombing raids. Important landing sites for supply flights were the Ruhama Airfield 12 km southeast of Sderot (31°27′43″N 34°43′11″E / 31.461891°N 34.719622°E) and the Malhata Airfield 20 km east of Beersheba, today's Nevatim Airbase.