A10-607. Hawker Siddeley 748-2-228. c/n 1607-136.
This aircraft was ordered new by the Australian Government for the Royal Australian Air Force It was constructed by Hawker Siddeley Aviation Limited, Woodford, Manchester - 1969 It was allocated the production number '136' First flown as 'A10-607' - March 28, 1969 Powered by Rolls Royce Dart 534 engines Accepted by the Royal Australian Air Force at Woodford as 'A10-607' - April 1969 Departed England on the ferry flight to Australia - May 1969 Arrived RAAF East Sale on completion of the ferry flight - May 15, 1969 Ferry route: Woodford - Athens - ? - New Delhi - Bangkok - Singapore - Denpasar - Darwin - Alice Springs - East Sale The aircraft was allocated to the School of Air Navigation, RAAF East Sale Transferred to No 32 Squadron, RAAF East Sale - July 01, 1989 Withdrawn from use at RAAF East Sale - May 31, 1998 The aircraft had flown 17,474 hours with 15,314 cycles The aircraft was dismantled with the fuselage trucked to the DSTO facility, Salisbury, South Australia DSTO had a contract upgrade the HS-748 Navigation Trainer fleet This fuselage was set up in a cradle minus the wings and tailplane as the 'test-jig' When it was decided to retire the HS-748 fleet this contract was cancelled The fuselage was sold to International Air Parts Pty Ltd It was transported by road to Sydney (Bankstown) and used as a source of spare parts - January 08, 2001 The tail and rudder are mounted on a plinth outside the 32 Squadron Building, RAAF East Sale |
A10-607. Royal Australian Air Force - in the standard livery at RAAF Point Cook Airport, February 1983. (R. N. Smith Copyright Image 0748-124.) |
A10-607. Royal Australian Air Force - in the standard livery at Melbourne Tullamarine Airport, November 22, 1989. (G. Canciani Copyright Image 0748-117.) |
A10-607. Royal Australian Air Force - in the low-viz grey livery at Melbourne Avalon Airport, March 24, 1995. (G. Canciani Copyright Image 0748-118.) |