South African Army Engineer School

The South African Army Engineer School is part of the South African Army Engineer Formation, which specifically trains for army engineering tasks.

School of Engineers
Active 1969  current
Country  South Africa
Branch  South African Army
Role Engineer training school
Part of South African Army Engineer Formation
Garrison/HQ Kroonstad, Free State

History

In 1946, an Engineer Training Wing was established at what was then the Military College, now the SA Army College. In 1964 the post of GSO2 Engineers was filled full-time by a Regular Force Officer. In 1948, the Wing was moved to Potchefstroom, where it became the Engineer Wing of the SA Army Artillery and SA School of Armour. In 1968, it was transferred to Kroonstad as the Engineer Training Centre. In 1969, it became the School of Engineers.[1]

Curriculum

Basic Military Engineering Training

Basic skills of military engineers is taught to all students, which is focused on combat:

These modules take 18 weeks to complete. Recruits arrive in January and graduate in September.

2nd phase Military Engineering Training (Specialization)

Recruits are then assigned to the following units for the various types of engineering disciplines:

Combat Engineering

South African Combat Engineering includes:

Constructing Infrastructure

The construction of roads, bridges, field defence and obstacles, water points, helipad construction, route reconnaissance, and erecting communication

Demolition of Infrastructure

Rigging, the use of explosives for the carrying out of demolitions, obstacle clearance and assault of fortifications.

Water Assault

Use of assault boats in obstacle crossings.

Operational Construction

Construction sappers are responsible for establishment of operational infrastructure for the South African Army, i.e. operational bases, roads and airfields. Functions include:

Other Training

The Engineer School runs about 100 training courses and many of the skills taught are directly relevant to the national economy. Trades taught and employed by include:

Specific Courses

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.