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Beja Airbase

Beja Air Base
BejaAB.jpg
Summary
Airport type Military
Serves Beja
In use 1964 - present
Elevation AMSL 636 ft / 194 m
Coordinates 38°04′44″N 007°55′57″W / 38.07889°N 7.93250°W / 38.07889; -7.93250Coordinates: 38°04′44″N 007°55′57″W / 38.07889°N 7.93250°W / 38.07889; -7.93250
Website www.ana.pt
Map
LPBJ is located in Portugal
LPBJ
LPBJ
Location within Portugal
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
01L/19R 3,450 11,319 Asphalt
01R/19L 2,951 9,682 Asphalt
Sources: Portuguese AIP

Beja Air Base (Portuguese: Base Aérea de Beja; IATA: BYJICAO: LPBJ), designated as Air Base No. 11 (Portuguese: Base Aérea Nº 11, BA11) is one of the most important military airbases in Portugal, 9 km (5.6 mi) northwest of Beja, 100 km (62 mi) north of Algarve. It is used by the Portuguese Air Force and has two parallel runways in the 01/19 direction, the biggest being 3,450 m × 60 m (11,320 ft × 200 ft). The base is home to two training squadrons, one helicopter squadron and one maritime patrol squadron.

The base was established on 21 October 1964, originally built to serve as a training facility for the Luftwaffe, due to airspace limitations within West Germany. Until 1993 it was used particularly for weapons training, and in 1987 the Portuguese Air Force's 103 Squadron using Lockheed T-33 and Northrop T-38 aircraft was relocated from Montijo. After their arrival, the base started to host a mixed array of fixed and rotary-wing trainers, as well as maritime patrol aircraft.

The base is now modern and well-equipped, employing around 1,000 personnel. It comprises two parallel runways running north/south (01L/19R, 01R/19L, the largest being 3,450 m (11,320 ft) in length and the other 2,951 m (9,682 ft) long. A third parallel runway/taxiway supports its helicopter facilities. Beja Air Base is one of the most important training facilities of the Portuguese Air Force and during 2008 operated over 70,000 flying hours. The first training phase comprises flying on Socata TB 30 Epsilon aircraft, while the final course is made on Alpha Jets of the 103 Squadron, which currently has 15 operational aircraft. The 552nd Squadron operates 12 Alouette III helicopters tasked with tactical transport for the army, helicopter pilot training and occasional search and rescue. The Alouette helicopters made a total of 314,000 flight hours and are due to be replaced by Agusta AW109 or Eurocopter Colibri by 2011. The 601st Squadron currently uses 7 P-3 Orion aircraft which provide 24/7 search and rescue and anti-submarine warfare cover.


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Wikipedia

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