Unit Name: | Historic Army Aircraft Flight |
Start Date: | (as Army Historic Aircraft Flight) |
End Date: | present |
Branch: | (originally) |
Type: | Historic flying display unit |
Role: | Memorial |
Size: | 7 aircraft |
Garrison: | Army Aviation Centre, Middle Wallop, Stockbridge, Hampshire, England, SO20 8DY |
Garrison Label: | Location |
Nickname: | HAAF |
Motto: | Let their glory not fade |
Equipment: | See list |
Equipment Label: | Aircraft |
Website: | HAAF.uk |
The Historic Army Aircraft Flight (HAAF) is a charitable trust which preserves and maintains former British Army Air Corps (AAC) aircraft in flying condition. It thus brings the history of British Army flying to life. It serves as a 'living museum' for ex-service personnel commemorative and memorial purposes, as an aid to recruiting, and for supporting wider British Army heritage in public. It features an aerial display group; comprising a de Havilland Beaver, a Westland Scout, an Agusta-Bell Sioux, and an Auster AOP.9.
Initially formed in, as the Historic Aircraft Flight (HAF) of the AAC, then since, as the Army Historic Aircraft Flight (AHAF), it was an official flight of the British Army. It was created in order to save and maintain one example of each aircraft operated since the Army Air Corps inception in 1957. Its purpose was to preserve the AAC's aviation heritage for future generations.
The aircraft of the AHAF were originally supported in part by the Ministry of Defence (MoD), along with additional donations and any income from air displays it undertook. Although the AHAF was self-administered by its own charitable company, in 2013, the MoD withdrew all official public funding. This forced the AHAF into a state of dormancy or 'suspended animation'.
In order to ensure that its aircraft remain airworthy and available, four of the AHAF aircraft (Auster, Beaver, Scout, and Sioux) were transferred to the Civil Register of the UK Civil Aviation Authority (UK CAA); this helps to reduce both maintenance servicing times and costs.
Now known as the Historic Army Aircraft Flight (HAAF), it operates as a Registered Charity (charity number: 1024043, as the Historic Aircraft Flight Trust),[1] governed by the Historic Army Aircraft Flight Trustee Limited.[2] The Historic Army Aircraft Flight Trustee Ltd was incorporated on, as a private company limited by guarantee without share capital.[2] Registered in England and Wales under company number 09572211, it is listed under the standard industrial classification of economic activities (SIC) as 'Museums activities' (91020).[2]
The Historic Army Aircraft Flight includes the following retired AAC aircraft:
flying | |||||||
de Havilland Canada | Beaver AL.1 | fixed-wing single-engine monoplane | XP820 | G-CICP | [3] | ||
Auster Aircraft Limited | AOP.9 | fixed-wing single-engine monoplane | XR244 | G-CICR | [4] | ||
Bell / Westland Aircraft | Sioux AH.1 | rotary-wing single-engine helicopter | XT131 | G-CICN | [5] | ||
Westland Helicopters | Scout AH.1 | rotary-wing single-engine helicopter | XT626 | G-CIBW | [6] | ||
De Havilland Canada | Chipmunk T.10 | fixed-wing single-engine monoplane | WD325 | TBA | |||
non flying | |||||||
Saunders-Roe | Skeeter AOP.12 | rotary-wing single-engine | XL812 | G-SARO | [7] |