RAE Bedford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

RAE Bedford
Fairford04-0130-JaguarXX145a.jpg
The Jaguar was tested at RAE Bedford during the 1970s.
Summary
Airport typeDisused RAF Airfield, Royal Aircraft Establishment
OwnerPrivate
LocationThurleigh near Bedford
Elevation AMSL289 ft / 88 m
Coordinates52°13′47″N 000°28′29″W / 52.22972°N 0.47472°W / 52.22972; -0.47472Coordinates: 52°13′47″N 000°28′29″W / 52.22972°N 0.47472°W / 52.22972; -0.47472
Map
EGVW is located in Bedfordshire
EGVW
EGVW
Location in Bedfordshire
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
05/23 6,000 1,829
11/29 4,200 1,280
18/36 4,200 1,280

RAE Bedford was a research site of the Royal Aircraft Establishment between 1946 and 1994. It was located near the village of Thurleigh, north of the town of Bedford in England and was the site of aircraft experimental development work.

In the book "A Short Illustrated History of the Royal Aircraft Establishment, Bedford", author Arthur Pearcy writes: "(RAE Bedford is) the finest research and development establishment outside the U.S.A."

Starting in 1946, construction work began to turn the wartime RAF airfield into what became known as the Royal Aeronautical Establishment, Bedford. The runway was extended in the post-war period to accommodate the Bristol Brabazon aircraft, which required a very long runway but which never went into production. A lot of the development for what became the Harrier was done here, one early version became known as the 'Flying Bedstead'. Also Thurleigh had a catapult runway and it was here that the 'ski jump' later fitted to some aircraft carriers was also developed. One local road was put in a cutting for a runway to be put above it, linking the Airfield site to the wind-tunnel site about a mile and a half away, although ultimately this was never carried out. The runway is some 10,500 ft long, and some 300 ft wide and as of June 2011 is used by a number of car storage companies.

Naval Air Department and the BEA Helicopters Experimental Unit was here at some point.[1]

The airfield was decommissioned in February 1994 [2] after a lengthy study determined that flight operations should be centralised at Boscombe Down in Wiltshire. Due to the cost and impracticality of relocating the Advanced Flight Simulator system the site retains some of its development work (under the banner of QinetiQ from mid-2001 onwards). As of early 2007, QinetiQ have sold their remaining stake in the Bedford Airfield site (as well as the nearby 'Wind Tunnel' site) and are planning to relocate the remaining staff to Farnborough in early 2008, finally ending the site's long association with military aviation.[needs update]

The airfield was closed officially in March 1994 and sold in 1996[2] with the RAE having become the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA). DERA consolidated its experimental flying operations at Boscombe Down, moving aircraft from Farnborough as well as Bedford.

The wind tunnel site is now the Twinwoods Business Park and some of the buildings are in commercial use. Red Bull Racing use the remaining horizontal wind tunnel and Twinwoods Adventure use the vertical wind tunnel, previously the Vertical Spinning Tunnel (VST) for indoor skydiving.

The VST was converted in 2005 by Bodyflight to be the first indoor skydiving wind tunnel in the UK, and at 16.4ft in diameter remains the largest. On 1 March 2019, Historic England listed the VST as Grade 2 due to its historic and architectural interest.[3] The rest of the building was converted in 2007 and is used by Twinwoods Adventure as a multi-activity centre.

Another building on the site is the Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre.

RAE Bedford seen from Odell

See also[]

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Howard 2011, p. 62.
  2. ^ a b "RAE Bedford, The Beginning". Bedford Aeronautical Heritage Group. Bedford Aeronautical Heritage Group. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  3. ^ Historic England

Bibliography[]

  • Howard, L; Burrow, M; Myall, E (2011). Fleet Air Arm helicopters since 1943. UK: Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd. ISBN 978-0-85130-304-8.
  • Pearcy, Arthur. A Short Illustrated History of the Royal Aircraft Establishment, Bedford Shrewsbury Airlife Publishing Ltd. 1999. (ISBN 1-85310-360-8)
Retrieved from ""