145 Squadron, Republic of Singapore Air Force

RSAF 145 Squadron
Active 1984
Role Strike fighter
Garrison/HQ Changi Air Base
Motto(s) "Swift & Valiant"
Equipment Twenty F-16D+ Fighting Falcons
Insignia
Identification
symbol
A Hornet which is poised to sting.

The 145 Squadron "Hornet" is a strike fighter squadron of the Republic of Singapore Air Force based currently at Changi Airbase (East) which is a new airbase, opened in 2004, to the east of Singapore Changi Airport on reclaimed land. With the hornet as its mascot, the squadron's motto is "Swift & Valiant".

History

First formed in 1984 at Tengah Air Base, the squadron flew the A-4S Skyhawk and later, the locally upgraded A-4SU Super Skyhawk, along with her sister squadron, the 142 Squadron. When the A-4SU was retired from active combat service, however, 142 Squadron was disbanded, while the 145 Squadron was retained to operate the newly upgraded F-16Ds from the new air base, an unsurprising decision considering the fact that the 145 Squadron had emerged as the best fighter squadron for five consecutive years since the year 2000 in the annual Singapore Armed Forces Best Unit Competition.[1]

New role

The twenty aircraft of the squadron are upgraded versions of the F-16D Block 52, hence known as the Block 52+ or F-16D+, are equipped with state-of-the-art Conformal Fuel Tanks, an enhanced radar with greater detection range and improved mapping capabilities, and an improved targeting pod, this enables the squadron to conduct precision day and night operations at a greater combat range and duration. This fact makes it a unique squadron within the RSAF as all its aircraft are tandem seaters and every mission is flown with a Pilot and Weapon System Officer (WSO.)

Information

The tail is adorned with a toned down squadron logo in the center of the tail with the serial number on the base.[2] It is the only fighter squadron which chose an insect as its mascot.

Achievements

The squadron clinched the Best Fighter Squadron award in the following years: 1998, 2000, 2012 and 2014.

Aircraft operated

  1. 16× T/A-4SU Super Skyhawks (1984 - 2004)
  2. 20× F-16D+ Fighting Falcons (2004 - present)

Latest photo

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.