Hopedale Air Station: Difference between revisions
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 152: | Line 152: | ||
* [http://www.c-and-e-museum.org/Pinetreeline/photos/photo22.html Pinetree Line Hopedale - Photos] | * [http://www.c-and-e-museum.org/Pinetreeline/photos/photo22.html Pinetree Line Hopedale - Photos] | ||
* [http://www.c-and-e-museum.org/Pinetreeline/gap/gfcm.html Pinetree Line Cape Makkovik Gap Filler] | * [http://www.c-and-e-museum.org/Pinetreeline/gap/gfcm.html Pinetree Line Cape Makkovik Gap Filler] | ||
* [http://www.c-and-e-museum.org/Pinetreeline/other/other22/other22ak.html Radio Relay Tropospheric Scatter System Brochure] | |||
* [http://lswilson.dewlineadventures.com/scs200/ Mid Canada Line – Sector Control Station 200] | * [http://lswilson.dewlineadventures.com/scs200/ Mid Canada Line – Sector Control Station 200] | ||
{{Visited|No}} | {{Visited|No}} | ||
Line 189: | Line 190: | ||
[[Category:TT-7]] | [[Category:TT-7]] | ||
[[Category:M-19]] | [[Category:M-19]] | ||
[[Category:FRC-39]] |
Revision as of 09:11, 12 June 2021
Hopedale Air Station (1953-1968) - A Cold War Pinetree Line Radar Station operational in 1953 near Hopedale, Newfoundland and Labrador as Hopedale Air Station. Initially manned by the 923rd AC&W Squadron and assigned an ID of N-28. This station also served as the Mid-Canada Line - Sector Control Station SCS 200 and as both a terminal and relay station for the Polevault Troposcatter communications system. Closed in 1968.
Cold WarFollowing the outbreak of the Korean War on 25 Jun 1950 and in response to a perceived Soviet bomber threat the United States Air Force (USAF) created the Northeast Air Command (NEAC), as a major command, to defend the Northeastern air approaches to the US. NEAC was responsible for all air defense forces in Newfoundland, Labrador, eastern Canada, and Greenland. The plan for the NEAC area included the construction of 10 permanent radar stations in Canada and 3 stations in Greenland, all as a part of the Pinetree Line. Of the 10 Canadian stations, 9 were to be manned by USAF personnel and one was to be manned by RCAF personnel The sites were selected and construction began in 1951-52. HistoryThe radar site near Hopedale was established and constructed in 1951-1953 by the contractor, Fraser Brace Construction Company Moncton, New Brunswick. The site became operational in 1953 as Hopedale Air Station manned by the 923nd Aircraft Control & Warning (AC&W) Squadron (USAF). The advanced party of USAF personnel arrived in June 1953. This site functioned for most of its life as a surveillance and ground-controlled intercept (GCI) site that identified aircraft entering their coverage and was prepared to guide armed interceptor aircraft to those it could not identify.
Initial equipment included the FPS-3C search radar and a TPS-502 height finder radar. The search radar was later upgraded to an FPS-20 and then to an FPS-93A. A TPS-502 height finder radar was installed and that was later replaced with two height finders, an FPS-6B and an FPS-90. The 923rd AC&W Squadron also operated a manned gap-filler radar site as a detachment, complete with operations personnel and a commanding officer (1957-1961). ClosureHopedale Air Station and the 923rd AC&W Squadron were deactivated on 18 Jun 1968. Polevault TroposcatterThe Polevault Troposcatter communications link at Hopedale was a heavy ground communications system that depended on bouncing radio waves off the troposphere for reliable long-distance communications circuits. Normal HF/LF and other radio links had proven unreliable and the Polevault system was implemented about 1954 to solve that problem. The Hopedale Polevault site provided tropo links with Saglek Air Station to the North and Goose AFB, to the South. The system then extended from Goose AFB to Cartwright AS and then to St. Anthony and down to Gander and then on to Red Cliff at St. John's. St. John's had cable communications with the US and it served as the southern terminus of the Polevault system. The Hopedale Polevault site also provided communications to the Cape Makkovik gap-filler radar site with an FRC-39 tropo link (1957-1961). Teletype channels provided hard copy communications with Headquarters in Newfoundland and beyond. By 1961, Detachment 9 of the 1933rd Communications Squadron (AFCS), a support organization of the 923rd AC&W Squadron, operated and maintained the Hopedale Polevault site. Gap FillersHopedale Air Station was responsible for the operation and maintenance of one manned remote gap-filler radar site. Gap-filler sites were placed in locations where the main search radar lacked coverage. The gap-filler site was manned by USAF maintenance and operations crews and operated as Detachment 1 of the 923 AC&W Squadron. On-site generators furnished electrical power and were usually operated by local or contract civilians. The sites were all equipped with short-range FPS-14 search radars and FST-1 Coordinate Data transmitters that could send digitized radar target data to the main radar site but manual operations continued even after the arrival of OA-947 remote displays. Both the FPS-14 radar set and the FST-1 were dual channel sets to increase site uptime. The Hopedale Air Station gap-filler radar was located at Cape Makkovik, Labrador.
Current StatusFoundational remains, no buildings remain.
See Also: Sources:
Links:
Visited: No
|
- Not Visited
- All
- Newfoundland and Labrador All
- Newfoundland and Labrador Radar Sites
- Hopedale Air Station
- Newfoundland and Labrador Not Visited
- USAF Radar Sites
- Pinetree Line Radar Sites
- Mid Canada Line Radar Sites
- Starter Page
- FPS-20
- FPS-6
- FPS-90
- FPS-14
- FST-1
- UPA-35
- UPX-6
- UPX 14
- GPX-7
- OA-947
- GPA-30
- GRT-3
- R-361
- GRC-27
- FRT-502
- FRT-503
- URG-60
- NE-612
- SSM-7
- TT-21
- TT-7
- M-19
- FRC-39