RAF Weybourne

Royal Air Force Station Weybourne
Active 16 May 1939 - 19 August 1942[1]
Country United Kingdom
Branch Royal Air Force
Type Anti-aircraft establishment
Based near Norwich, Norfolk, England
Royal Air Force Ensign
March Royal Air Force March Past
Equipment De Havilland DH-82B Queen Bee

RAF Weybourne was a Second World War anti-aircraft establishment. 'X' Flt, No 1 Anti-Aircraft Co-operation Unit were based at the station between 16 May and 14 September 1939, with 'T' Flt, No 1 Anti-Aircraft Co-operation Unit there between 25 February and 29 April 1942. No 6 Anti-Aircraft Co-operation Unit were based there between 7 December 1942 and 30 November 1943.[2]

Associated with the anti-aircraft gunnery, the station operated the De Havilland DH-82B Queen Bee target drone aircraft, a radio-controlled target tug version of the Tiger Moth II.

Postwar

Although the published closure date known for this airfield relates the World War II airfield, the Army maintained an Anti Aircraft training camp across from RAF Weybourne using 40mm Bofors guns linked to AA4 mk7 gun laying radar. When that closed in 1958 the radars were transferred to the RAF. A very small permanent detachment was maintained there using the obsolete radar into the 1980s for cross-tell training, decoy work and to extend low level coverage. Two cats were in residence in the mid 1980s - 'Techy' and 'Sparks.' In the late 1980s trials were carried out to confirm the site's suitability for deployment of the new mobile radars that were coming into service.

A Marconi Type 91 'Martello' radar was moved from RAF Trimingham to Weybourne in September 1996, operated by 432 Signals Unit acting as a Ready Platform (along with RAF Hopton and Trimingham) for the IUKADGE Series II (United Kingdom Air Defence Ground Environment) Radar System controlled from the R3 underground control centre at RAF Neatishead.

In October 1997 the Type 91 at RAF Weybourne was de-built; replaced when the Type 93 at RAF Trimingham became operational.[3]

In 2001 the station was used during an exercise by 22 Squadron RAF Search & Rescue, suggesting that it was still technically active at that time.[4]

The old camp was up until recently used occasionally by the Boy Scouts as a camp site. Ironically one of the ancient AA4 Mk7 radars that had been transferred from the army camp in 1958 was moved back where it came from to join the Muckleburgh Collection shortly after the RAF put the site back into 'care and maintenance'

See also

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References

Coordinates: 52°57′02″N 1°07′17″E / 52.9505°N 1.1215°E / 52.9505; 1.1215

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