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No. 330 Squadron RNoAF

No. 330 Squadron RNoAF (Norwegian: 330 skvadron) is a helicopter unit of the Royal Norwegian Air Force (RNoAF) and is Norway's military search and rescue service. The squadron operates ten Westland Sea King helicopters based at six airbases along the coast. Headquartered at Sola Air Station, the squadron has detachments at Rygge, Florø, Ørland, Bodø and Banak. The unit's primary duty is search and rescue (SAR), with secondary duties consisting of air ambulance and disaster relief.

No. 330 Squadron RNoAF
Emblem
Active25 April 1941–21 November 1945
1953-1958
1962-1968
1973-present
BranchRoyal Norwegian Air Force
RoleSearch and rescue
Part of137th Air Wing
Garrison/HQSola Air Station
Aircraft flown
FighterF-84G (1953–58)
HelicopterSea King (1973–current)
AW101 (2020-)
PatrolN-3PB (1941–43)
Catalina (1942–43)
Sunderland (1943–45)
Albatross (1962–68)

The squadron has its roots in the No. 330 Squadron RAF, which conducted maritime surveillance, Arctic convoy escort and anti-submarine warfare during the Second World War. It was established on Iceland on 25 April 1941, where it operated Northrop N-3PB and Consolidated PBY Catalina seaplanes. It relocated to RAF Oban in Scotland on 23 January 1943 and adopted Short Sunderland flying boats in the same role. It relocated to Sola in June 1945, where it operated mostly as an airline until December, when it was deactivated.

The unit was reactivated between 20 July 1953 and 5 July 1958 to operate the Republic F-84G Thunderjet fighters, first based at Gardermoen Air Station and from 1956 at Rygge. It was again reactivated from 1 March 1962 to 1 October 1968 to carry out maritime surveillance and anti-submarine operations from Sola, using the Grumman HU-16 Albatross. In its current role the squadron became operational in 1973, using ten, later twelve Sea Kings. These are due to be replaced with the AgustaWestland AW101 from 2020.

Operations edit

 
Rescue swimmer being hoisted from the Sea King

The 330 Squadron is part of the Rescue Helicopter Service of the Royal Norwegian Air Force. It is based at Sola Air Station, with detachments at Florø, Ørland, Bodø, Rygge and Banak. The unit's primary role is search and rescue. The squadron is funded through a cooperation between the Ministry of Defence, the Ministry of Justice and Public Security and the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs. Operationally the squadron is under the command of the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre of Southern Norway (JRCC SN) and the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre of Northern Norway (JRCC NN), respectively.[1] Norway has signed agreements with Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, the United Kingdom and Russia which under given circumstances may result in the 330 Squadron operating within these countries' territories.[2]

The squadron operates twelve Westland Sea King helicopters. Two are located on each base at any given time,[3] Up to two helicopters are on long-term maintenance at any time. At all bases at least one of the helicopters is on stand-by at any time.[3] The Florø base is operated by the civilian contractor CHC Helikopter Service until the new SAR Queen helicopters are ready.[4]

The helicopters are manned by two pilots, a systems operator, a navigator, a technician/lift operator, a rescue swimmer and an anaesthesiologist. Five of these are military personnel, while the anaesthesiologists work for the local health trust and are funded through them.[1]

 
A demonstration of a rescue

The Sea Kings fly a combined 4,500 hours per year. Half of these are used for missions, the remainder for training.[5] Because the unit operates under military rules, it has a stricter training regime than civilian operators. It can also operate under more severe weather conditions.[6] The bases have on-call rooms and a crew on duty at all times. The squadron aims as an average scrambling time of 15 minutes; this varies between 10 and 25 minutes depending on the time of day, the layout of the base and preparations.[3]

The 330 Squadron is part of the National Air Ambulance Service. It carries out about 800 missions per year,[7] or about ten percent of the total helicopter ambulance missions in Norway. The unit's helicopters are used when the ordinary helicopter ambulances (Eurocopter EC135, EC145 and AgustaWestland AW139) are unable to operate due to weather; missions in which a large cabin is needed such as due to the number of patients or an incubator; and in areas where the Sea Kings are closer and areas where there is no ordinary air ambulance service. Ambulance use must be permitted by the JRCCs.[8]

When not used for SAR missions, the Sea Kings may be used for auxiliary and transport missions within the armed forces, assisting the Norwegian Police Service, aerial firefighting and anti-pollution.[9]

Bases edit

 
 
Vigra (former)
class=notpageimage|
Locations of 330 Squadron bases

The following is a list of bases used by the 330 Sqn. It denotes the period they were in use, the medical provider, the number of missions and flight-hours in 2013.

Iceland edit

 
One of the Northrop N-3PB torpedo bombers of 330 Squadron

The Royal Norwegian Navy Air Service ordered twelve Northrop N-3PB Nomads on 12 March 1940. This was the first-ever order for Northrop Corporation. By the time the first aircraft was finished in December 1940, Germany had invaded Norway. The aircraft were therefore transferred to Little Norway in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. During late fall the Norwegian Nygaardsvold's Cabinet agreed with the Royal Air Force that the exiled Norwegian forces could use the Northrops to operate reconnaissance and escort services around Iceland.[17]

The 330 (Norwegian) Squadron was activated on 25 April 1941 and based at RAF Reykjavik, also known as Corbett Camp, in the vicinity of Reykjavík on Iceland.[18] The squadron originally consisted of 128 men, all Norwegian. These had various backgrounds: 80 were trained at Little Norway; most of the rest were sailors from sunken ships or men brought in from Lofoten during the Operation Claymore raid. These lacked military training, forcing the squadron to establish a recruit school.[19] The base consisted of a dozen Nissen huts.[18] The facilities were primitive and the soldiers forced to sleep on the muddy ground.[19]

 
Northrop N-3PB being used to transport a seriously ill woman to hospital in Reykjavik in Iceland, May 1942

The squadron was under RAF Coastal Command in Reykjavík.[20] The eighteen Northrop N-3PB aircraft arrived by ship on 22 May.[21] After final assembly they were operational on 23 June. The squadron was originally set to carry out Arctic convoy escorts.[20] The squadron's A-flight and headquarters were located at Corbett Camp, the B-flight was located at Valhall in Akureyri and the C-flight at Camp Norse in Búðareyri. The latter two were established on 20 June and 14 September, respectively.[22]

It was quickly established that the aircraft were poorly suited for their role. Due to the high latitude their compasses did not work properly, often leaving them without proper navigation. Two aircraft were subject to crashes after misnavigation.[23] They participated in anti-submarine patrols and were part of the capture of U-570. From late 1941 the missions changed focus and the squadron instead took up a role as an air ambulance in Iceland.[24]

 
 
Akureyri
 
Búðareyri
class=notpageimage|
Locations of 330 Squadron bases in Iceland

Both Norwegian and British authorities discussed converting the 330 Sqn to use the Lockheed Hudson, but the fighter role was instead placed on two new Norwegian squadrons, 331 and 332.[25] No. 330 was instead issued the Consolidated PBY-5A Catalina in June 1942.[26] However, they were unsuitable for Búðareyri and the Northrops were not needed in Reykjavík, so the squadron ended up with six each of the Catalina and the Northrop.[27] An operating challenge was a lack of spare parts, but the Norwegians were helped both with parts and training by a nearby United States Air Force squadron.[28]

The Catalinas retained the same roles as the Northrops: anti-submarine sweeping, patrol and convoy escort. The aircraft rotated between being based at Reykjavík and at Akureyri.[29] They successfully hit U-592 on 30 June and U-580 on 25 August 1942.[30] In December the Norwegian authorities decided to relocate the 330 Sqn. The Akureyri base was immediately ordered to move its aircraft to Reykjavík. Operations of the Catalina had commenced in November and of the Northrops in December.[31] The C-flight continued to operate out of Búðareyri until 11 June 1943. During its period on Iceland the squadron flew 4379 hours, of which 3524 with the Northrops and 855 with Catalinas.[32] Twenty-one soldiers were killed.[30]

Scotland edit

The A- and B-flights departed Iceland for RAF Oban in Scotland on 23 January 1943.[33] This involved a switch to the Short Sunderland flying boat. These were expensive aircraft which the Norwegian government-in-exile could not afford. The RAF therefore agreed to lend the aircraft to the squadron, while operating costs were still paid for by the Norwegians.[34] The squadron was set up with six Mk II and six Mk III,[35] the latter having somewhat longer range.[36] There were technical challenges with the Bristol Pegasus engines, which were underpowered and often stopped mid-air. The situation was often aggravated when the feathering malfunctioned.[37]

 
Short Sunderland of the 330 Sqn

The squadron became operative on 20 April 1943. Three days later a detachment was sent to RAF Scatsta in Shetland. The role continued as before, with submarine sweeping, patrol and reconnaissance, as well as meteorological surveys. They regularly patrolled the areas between Shetland past the Faeroe Islands to Iceland. Also active in the area was the Norwegian 333 Squadron and other RAF squadrons.[38] The Sunderlands would on occasion partake in aerial combat with German fighters. Following the Allied Invasion of Normandy in June 1944, German submarines increasingly moved northwards and the 330 Sqn intensified its sweeping.[39] From August the German tactics changed and the 330 Sqn's patrols moved steadily closer to Norway.[40]

During the period in Scotland the squadron flew 12,000 hours, carrying out 655 sweeps and patrols, 50 convoy escorts and 22 search and rescue missions. Five submarines were attacked, sinking one and badly damaging another. No ships escorted by the 330 Sqn were sunk. Six Sunderlands were lost during the war, both due to engine failure and due to enemy action. All but one resulted in loss of life.[41]

In April 1945 the Mk II and III Sunderlands were replaced with Mk V, which had more reliable Pratt & Whitney Twin Wasp.[42] At the End of World War II in Europe in May 1945, the 330 Sqn had eleven operational Sunderlands. While the fighter squadrons were without work, the amount of work for the 330 and 333 Sqn intensified.[43] There was a massive need for air transport, both from the United Kingdom to Norway and within Norway. Both squadrons were transferred to Norway in June, with the 330 Sqn being based at the water aerodrome at Sola Air Station. These were used on a daily coastal route from there to Bergen Airport, Sandviken and Trondheim,[44] often onwards to Tromsø Airport, Skattøra.[45] Both squadrons were soon operating more as airlines than as military units.[44]

Command of the squadron was given to the newly formed Royal Norwegian Air Force on 21 November 1945, when RAF withdrew from Norway. The 330 Sqn was officially deactivated on 15 December 1945. The aircraft were still owned by the RAF, but were not returned until early 1946. Most of the personnel transferred to 333, which had just been relocated to Sola.[45]

Aircraft operated during World War II edit

Dates Aircraft Variant Notes
25 April 1941[46] Northrop N-3PB Nomad Single-engined floatplane patrol bomber/torpedo bomber built to a Norwegian specification.
Jul 1942[46] Consolidated PBY Catalina Twin-engined flying boat patrol bomber.
February 1943[46]
March 1943
April 1945
Short S.25 Sunderland II
III
V
Four-engined flying boat patrol bomber.

Thunderjet edit

 
Heritage Republic F-84G Thunderjet of RNoAF

Following Norway's entry into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and as recipients of the Marshall Plan aid,[45] Norway took delivery of its first of 206 Republic F-84 Thunderjets on 10 September 1951, in what would become a delivery of 206 airframes.[47] Six squadrons would in the end be set up to operate the aircraft.[48] As the deliveries advanced, the 330 Squadron was reactivated on 20 July 1953 and stationed at Gardermoen. Half the crew were recruited from other F-84G squadrons, the rest were freshly trained. The first aircraft was acquired on 22 August and by November all had been taken into use. After completing its tactical and bombing training at Lista Air Station in March 1954, the squadron was declared operative.[45]

The squadron had between 22 and 27 airframes while operating the Thunderjets. It was originally set to provide interception, but from 1 November 1954 it was remissioned to become an operational training unit. All F-84G check-outs were carried out in the 330 Sqn, and the instructor pilots received twice the flight hours as their colleagues in other squadrons.[45] Between the training courses the squadron practised bombing at Sola Air Station and participated in exercises. The 330 Sqn moved to Rygge Air Station on 28 August 1956. Following the retirement of the F-84G and the introduction of the North American F-86F Sabre, the 330 Sqn was deactivated on 5 July 1958.[49]

Albatross edit

 
After ending service in Norway the Albatrosses were transferred to the Hellenic Air Force, here depicting an ex-Norwegian heritage aircraft

The 333 Sqn had continued to operate the Catalinas through the 1950s, although they by the end of the decade were all but modern. The Norwegian authorities agreed to receive eighteen Grumman HU-16B-ASW Albatrosses through the Marshall Plan. These flying boats were intended for maritime surveillance and transport to Svalbard,[50] as well as submarine sweeping.[51] 330 and 333 Sqn would receive nine airframes each. Combined they would provide 8,100 flight-hours annual, up from 2,400 with the Catalinas. Training was carried out by the United States Coast Guard and Air Force.[50]

The 300 Sqn's first Albatross landed in February 1962 and the unit was activated at Sola Air Station on 1 March. Delivery of the final aircraft took place in late 1963. The 330 Sqn was designated the operational training unit and all check-outs took place at Sola for both squadrons. From late 1962 a detachment was established at Bardufoss Air Station with one aircraft and one crew.[49] The 330 Sqn was declared operative from 15 July 1963. The detachment was a strain on the unit's moral and its commanded asked his subordinates to withdraw it and replace it with a mobilized unit. The resources used to support the detachment made the 330 Sqn almost unable to provide sweeping operations.[50]

The Albatrosses improved the sweeping capacity and introduced news technology such as sonar, radar and magnetic anomaly detector. Norway did not have capacity to sweep its waters and instead focused on the surveillance. This allowed both British and American forces to carry out such tasks.[52] Despite the leap in technology, the Albatrosses were soon declared obsolete. Allied Forces Northern Europe determined that they needed full anti-submarine capabilities and opted to replace the flying boats with the Lockheed P-3 Orion.[53] Five Orions were capable of the same job as eighteen Albatrosses, and the number of squadrons was cut to one. The 330 Sqn was therefore deactivated on 1 October 1968.[49]

Sea King edit

 
Sea King at Bergen Airport, Flesland

Search and rescue was at the time only a secondary role for various air force units, such as the Albatross, Bell UH-1B and Bell 47. Norway lacked the dedicated SAR service that Denmark had. This became evident in 1966, when the Norwegian ferry Skagerrak sank off the Danish coast in September 1966. Everyone on board was saved, but it was questioned whether this would have been the case if the incident had occurred in Norwegian waters.[54] The task was given to the Ministry of Justice, who as a temporary solution from 1968 to 1973 signed an agreement with Helikopter Service to operate two Sikorsky S-61 out of Sola and Bodø.[55]

Both a private operation with civilian aircraft, a military operation and a joint civilian and military operation were considered. A single operator built with a fast roll-out would give the lowest investments.[56] The Air Force was interested in operating this service to replace its own rescue service, to gain political goodwill and to add to the anti-submarine capability. The latter was rejected by the politicians. The Westland Sea King was chosen over the S-61 due to a better offset agreement. Parliament approved the purchase of ten helicopters in 1970,[57] to be stationed at four bases, Sola, Ørland, Bodø and Banak. This would allow any location along the coast to be reached within 90 minutes.[58] The Oslofjord and Skagerrak was covered by Bell UH-1s of the 720 Squadron at Rygge.[56]

 
Sea King at Ørland Main Air Station

The 330 Sqn was assigned the SAR task and was headquartered at Bodø Main Air Station, with a wing at each location. The A-flight was at Bodø, the B-flight at Banak, the C-flight at Ørland and the D-flight at Sola. Of ten aircraft, two were stationed at each base and two were at any given time in for overhaul. The flights were re-designated as detachments from 1980. The squadron was officially reactivated on 25 April 1973.[58] The flights at Sola and Bodø were operative 1 May and the other two on 1 August.[59] The first major was on 7 April 1974, when the Banak flight saved 13 lives off the trawler Longvabakk in Oksfjorden.[58]

Especially among the first officers the SAR service was not what they had imagined when joining the air force and many applied to the Air Force Academy. This caused new first officers to be ordered to the 300 Sqn, which reinforced the problems, resulting in high turnover.[59] The Sea Kings were designed to be maritime helicopters, but were increasingly used for terrestrial SAR missions, and on occasion aerial firefighting.[58] Throughout the 1970s the number of air ambulance missions increased dramatically, hitting 242 in 1977.[56]

 
Sea King and ambulance during a mission near Bodø

On 30 April 1977 one helicopter disappeared off the coast of Sola. A replacement helicopter was delivered in January 1978. Three helicopters participated in the most extensive operation following the sinking of Alexander L. Kielland on 27 March 1980. On 22 April 1982 another helicopter crashed, this time without fatalities, when hitting a power line in Sirdal.[58] Another such incident occurred on 10 November 1986 near Bodø, this time with one fatality. In 1988 another helicopter crashed at Tyinvann in 1988, without fatalities and with the aircraft being repaired. During the late 1980s the helicopters were often grounded due to lack of spare parts, which on 6 July 1988 hindered the unit form participating in aiding the sinking Piper Alpha oil platform.[60]

The National Air Ambulance Service was inaugurated in 1988 and the 330 Sqn became part of this. This involved the acquisition of eight smaller ambulance helicopters—later increased to twelve—which could relieve the Sea Kings. Meanwhile, the air ambulance role of the Sea Kings were increased with the inclusions of an anaesthesiologist on board. This would also aid in SAR missions, where the rescued could be severely injured. The task of providing the anaesthesiologist was placed with the county municipality.[56]

 
Sea King during flight

The accident in 1988 reduced the fleet to eight. This spurred the Ministry of Justice to wet lease the services of the commercial companies Helikopter Service and Mørefly, respectively operating S-61 and Eurocopter AS332 Super Puma. These were placed at Ålesund Airport, Vigra from 1 November 1988 to 31 January 1989, at Sandefjord Airport, Torp from 1 February 1989 to 31 December 1990, and from 1 January to 31 July 1991 at Sola.[56]

The Sea Kings had two accidents in 1990 and 1991, respectively, after which the helicopters needed to be renovated. A new Mk 43B was delivered in August 1992, followed by the renovated aircraft from the 1990 crash. The main difference was new avionics. The squadron then, one by one, upgraded the avionics on the entire fleet, a job completed in 1996.[61] The role of the SAR service was evaluated in 1992 and it ended up with Parliament approving the purchase of two more helicopters, bringing the total to twelve. The two new helicopters were delivered in 1995.[62]

With the additional helicopters, the 330 Sqn could open a new base, at Ålesund Airport, Vigra. The goal was to increase the coverage in Møre og Romsdal and Sogn og Fjordane, situated midway between Ørland and Sola. By 1998 the government instead determined that the extra helicopters should be based in Eastern Norway and moved the base to Rygge Air Station. The new base became operational on 22 March 1999.[10] This relieved the 720 Sqn for their SAR task, for which they neither had suitable aircraft nor the necessary preparedness.[63]

From 2002 the anaesthesiologist became the responsibility of the respective health trust. From 2004 the funding was changed and the 330 Sqn is paid for through the Ministry of Justice and the Police. From the start the service had a reaction time, from alarm to airborne, of 60 minutes. Sola was the first base to receive an on-call room, allowing the response time to be lowered to 15 minutes. This proved successful and was introduced at Banak in 2006, Bodø in 2007, and Ørland and Rygge in 2008. A sixth base was opened at Florø Airport in 2009.[1] The 330 Squadron was featured in an eight-episode television documentary series of the same name, broadcast by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation in 2009.[64]

AW101 edit

 
A Norwegian Leonardo AW101 SAR Queen helicopter, 2017

The replacement of the Sea Kings was first discussed in a Norwegian Official Report in 1997.[65] In competition with the AgustaWestland AW101, the Eurocopter AS532 Cougar and the Sikorsky S-92, Norway ordered fourteen NHIndustries NH90 helicopters in 2001 to meet the needs of the Royal Norwegian Navy. Options would be places for a future ten SAR helicopters and fifteen troop transports. By operating only one class of helicopters, the Air Force hoped to cut costs.[66]

The Ministry of Justice canceled the options in 2007 and instead initiated a new procurement process. This resulted in a project organization being established, Norwegian All Weather Search and Rescue Helicopter (NAWSARH). The procurement was in cooperation with Icelandic authorities.[67] The project prequalified four models, NH90, AW101, EC-725 and S-92. On 8 November 2013 the project announced that it had selected AgustaWestland as the provider. The contract is for sixteen units with an option for a further six. The first helicopter were delivered in 2017.

AW101 will replace Sea King base for base, with Sola Air base declared operative with the new helicopters September 1st 2020. At the same time it was revealed that AW101 in Norwegian service will be named SAR Queen.[68] Ørland Air base was the next to be operative in May 2021.[69]

The last Sea King retired by December 12th 2023 when it was replaced by a SAR Queen at Bodø Air station.[70]

Fleet edit

The following is a list of the fleet composition of the 330 Sqd. The quantity (qty) specifies the peak number of simultaneously operated aircraft.

Fleet
Aircraft Qty Period
Northrop N-3PB 18 1941–43
Consolidated PBY Catalina 6 1942–43
Short Sunderland II 6 1943–45
Short Sunderland III 6 1943–45
Short Sunderland V 12 1945
Republic F-84G Thunderjet 27 1953–58
Grumman HU-16 Albatross 18 1962–68
Westland Sea King 12 1973–2023
AgustaWestland AW101 16 2020-Present

Personnel edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Ministry of Justice and the Police: 9
  2. ^ NOU: 32
  3. ^ a b c Ministry of Justice and the Police: 10
  4. ^ "Super Puma overtar for Sea King i den norske redningstjenesten - Tu.no". September 2017.
  5. ^ Ministry of Justice and the Police: 17
  6. ^ Ministry of Justice and the Police: 19
  7. ^ Ministry of Justice and the Police: 12
  8. ^ Ministry of Justice and the Police: 14
  9. ^ Ministry of Justice and the Police: 22
  10. ^ a b Hjelle: 133
  11. ^ "Banak" (in Norwegian). National Air Ambulance Service. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  12. ^ "Bodø" (in Norwegian). National Air Ambulance Service. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  13. ^ "Florø" (in Norwegian). National Air Ambulance Service. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  14. ^ "Ørland" (in Norwegian). National Air Ambulance Service. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  15. ^ "Rygge" (in Norwegian). National Air Ambulance Service. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  16. ^ "Sola" (in Norwegian). National Air Ambulance Service. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  17. ^ Glenne: 420
  18. ^ a b Henriksen: 127
  19. ^ a b Henriksen: 128
  20. ^ a b Henriksen: 131
  21. ^ Henriksen: 129
  22. ^ Henriksen: 141
  23. ^ Glenne: 421
  24. ^ Glenne: 422
  25. ^ Henriksen: 164
  26. ^ Henriksen: 166
  27. ^ Henriksen: 167
  28. ^ Henriksen: 168
  29. ^ Henriksen: 170
  30. ^ a b Henriksen: 179
  31. ^ Henriksen: 176
  32. ^ Henriksen: 178
  33. ^ Henriksen: 439
  34. ^ Henriksen: 441
  35. ^ Henriksen: 443
  36. ^ Henriksen: 442
  37. ^ Henriksen: 444
  38. ^ Henriksen: 451
  39. ^ Henriksen: 465
  40. ^ Henriksen: 479
  41. ^ Henriksen: 481
  42. ^ Arheim: 85
  43. ^ Duvsete : 19
  44. ^ a b Duvsete : 21
  45. ^ a b c d e Arheim: 86
  46. ^ a b c Jefford 1988, p. 86.
  47. ^ Glenne: 446
  48. ^ Glenne: 447
  49. ^ a b c Arheim: 87
  50. ^ a b c Duvsete : 319
  51. ^ Duvsete : 321
  52. ^ Duvsete : 323
  53. ^ Duvsete : 325
  54. ^ Duvsete : 352
  55. ^ Duvsete : 353
  56. ^ a b c d e NOU: 23
  57. ^ Duvsete : 354
  58. ^ a b c d e Arheim: 88
  59. ^ a b Duvsete : 356
  60. ^ Arheim: 89
  61. ^ Arheim: 90
  62. ^ Arheim: 91
  63. ^ "St.meld. nr. 44 (2000-2001) – Redningshelikoptertjenesten i fremtiden" (PDF) (in Norwegian). Ministry of Justice and the Police. 11 May 2001. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  64. ^ Kjølleberg, Even (11 March 2009). "330 skvadronen" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
  65. ^ NOU: 16
  66. ^ Åldstedt, Finn (4 October 2000). "Velger enhetshelikopter". Adresseavisen (in Norwegian). p. 20.
  67. ^ Ministry of Justice and the Police: 7
  68. ^ "Overtar for Sea King: Nytt redningshelikopter har fått nytt navn - Tu.no". September 2020.
  69. ^ "Ørland er operative med SAR Queen - Forsvaret".
  70. ^ Dalløkken, Per Erlien (11 May 2021). "Kostnadssmell for nye redningshelikoptre: Peker på forsinkelser og ombygging på sykehus". Teknisk Ukeblad (in Norwegian). Retrieved 17 November 2021.

Bibliography edit

squadron, rnoaf, norwegian, skvadron, helicopter, unit, royal, norwegian, force, rnoaf, norway, military, search, rescue, service, squadron, operates, westland, king, helicopters, based, airbases, along, coast, headquartered, sola, station, squadron, detachmen. No 330 Squadron RNoAF Norwegian 330 skvadron is a helicopter unit of the Royal Norwegian Air Force RNoAF and is Norway s military search and rescue service The squadron operates ten Westland Sea King helicopters based at six airbases along the coast Headquartered at Sola Air Station the squadron has detachments at Rygge Floro Orland Bodo and Banak The unit s primary duty is search and rescue SAR with secondary duties consisting of air ambulance and disaster relief No 330 Squadron RNoAFEmblemActive25 April 1941 21 November 19451953 19581962 19681973 presentBranchRoyal Norwegian Air ForceRoleSearch and rescuePart of137th Air WingGarrison HQSola Air StationAircraft flownFighterF 84G 1953 58 HelicopterSea King 1973 current AW101 2020 PatrolN 3PB 1941 43 Catalina 1942 43 Sunderland 1943 45 Albatross 1962 68 The squadron has its roots in the No 330 Squadron RAF which conducted maritime surveillance Arctic convoy escort and anti submarine warfare during the Second World War It was established on Iceland on 25 April 1941 where it operated Northrop N 3PB and Consolidated PBY Catalina seaplanes It relocated to RAF Oban in Scotland on 23 January 1943 and adopted Short Sunderland flying boats in the same role It relocated to Sola in June 1945 where it operated mostly as an airline until December when it was deactivated The unit was reactivated between 20 July 1953 and 5 July 1958 to operate the Republic F 84G Thunderjet fighters first based at Gardermoen Air Station and from 1956 at Rygge It was again reactivated from 1 March 1962 to 1 October 1968 to carry out maritime surveillance and anti submarine operations from Sola using the Grumman HU 16 Albatross In its current role the squadron became operational in 1973 using ten later twelve Sea Kings These are due to be replaced with the AgustaWestland AW101 from 2020 Contents 1 Operations 2 Bases 2 1 Iceland 2 2 Scotland 3 Aircraft operated during World War II 3 1 Thunderjet 3 2 Albatross 3 3 Sea King 3 4 AW101 4 Fleet 5 Personnel 6 References 7 BibliographyOperations edit nbsp Rescue swimmer being hoisted from the Sea King The 330 Squadron is part of the Rescue Helicopter Service of the Royal Norwegian Air Force It is based at Sola Air Station with detachments at Floro Orland Bodo Rygge and Banak The unit s primary role is search and rescue The squadron is funded through a cooperation between the Ministry of Defence the Ministry of Justice and Public Security and the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs Operationally the squadron is under the command of the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre of Southern Norway JRCC SN and the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre of Northern Norway JRCC NN respectively 1 Norway has signed agreements with Denmark Sweden Finland Iceland the United Kingdom and Russia which under given circumstances may result in the 330 Squadron operating within these countries territories 2 The squadron operates twelve Westland Sea King helicopters Two are located on each base at any given time 3 Up to two helicopters are on long term maintenance at any time At all bases at least one of the helicopters is on stand by at any time 3 The Floro base is operated by the civilian contractor CHC Helikopter Service until the new SAR Queen helicopters are ready 4 The helicopters are manned by two pilots a systems operator a navigator a technician lift operator a rescue swimmer and an anaesthesiologist Five of these are military personnel while the anaesthesiologists work for the local health trust and are funded through them 1 nbsp A demonstration of a rescue The Sea Kings fly a combined 4 500 hours per year Half of these are used for missions the remainder for training 5 Because the unit operates under military rules it has a stricter training regime than civilian operators It can also operate under more severe weather conditions 6 The bases have on call rooms and a crew on duty at all times The squadron aims as an average scrambling time of 15 minutes this varies between 10 and 25 minutes depending on the time of day the layout of the base and preparations 3 The 330 Squadron is part of the National Air Ambulance Service It carries out about 800 missions per year 7 or about ten percent of the total helicopter ambulance missions in Norway The unit s helicopters are used when the ordinary helicopter ambulances Eurocopter EC135 EC145 and AgustaWestland AW139 are unable to operate due to weather missions in which a large cabin is needed such as due to the number of patients or an incubator and in areas where the Sea Kings are closer and areas where there is no ordinary air ambulance service Ambulance use must be permitted by the JRCCs 8 When not used for SAR missions the Sea Kings may be used for auxiliary and transport missions within the armed forces assisting the Norwegian Police Service aerial firefighting and anti pollution 9 Bases edit nbsp nbsp Banak nbsp Bodo nbsp Orland nbsp Vigra former nbsp Floro nbsp Sola nbsp Ryggeclass notpageimage Locations of 330 Squadron bases The following is a list of bases used by the 330 Sqn It denotes the period they were in use the medical provider the number of missions and flight hours in 2013 Bases Base Period Medical Missions Hours Refs Alesund Airport Vigra 1995 98 More og Romsdal County Municipality 10 Station Group Banak 1973 Finnmark Hospital Trust 230 744 11 Bodo Main Air Station 1973 Nordland Hospital Trust 323 761 12 Floro Airport 2009 Forde Hospital Trust 149 476 13 Orland Main Air Station 1973 Norsk Luftambulanse St Olav s Hospital Trust 239 726 14 Rygge Air Station 1999 Oslo University Hospital 225 607 15 Sola Air Station 1973 Stavanger Hospital Trust 225 850 16 Iceland edit nbsp One of the Northrop N 3PB torpedo bombers of 330 Squadron The Royal Norwegian Navy Air Service ordered twelve Northrop N 3PB Nomads on 12 March 1940 This was the first ever order for Northrop Corporation By the time the first aircraft was finished in December 1940 Germany had invaded Norway The aircraft were therefore transferred to Little Norway in Toronto Ontario Canada During late fall the Norwegian Nygaardsvold s Cabinet agreed with the Royal Air Force that the exiled Norwegian forces could use the Northrops to operate reconnaissance and escort services around Iceland 17 The 330 Norwegian Squadron was activated on 25 April 1941 and based at RAF Reykjavik also known as Corbett Camp in the vicinity of Reykjavik on Iceland 18 The squadron originally consisted of 128 men all Norwegian These had various backgrounds 80 were trained at Little Norway most of the rest were sailors from sunken ships or men brought in from Lofoten during the Operation Claymore raid These lacked military training forcing the squadron to establish a recruit school 19 The base consisted of a dozen Nissen huts 18 The facilities were primitive and the soldiers forced to sleep on the muddy ground 19 nbsp Northrop N 3PB being used to transport a seriously ill woman to hospital in Reykjavik in Iceland May 1942 The squadron was under RAF Coastal Command in Reykjavik 20 The eighteen Northrop N 3PB aircraft arrived by ship on 22 May 21 After final assembly they were operational on 23 June The squadron was originally set to carry out Arctic convoy escorts 20 The squadron s A flight and headquarters were located at Corbett Camp the B flight was located at Valhall in Akureyri and the C flight at Camp Norse in Budareyri The latter two were established on 20 June and 14 September respectively 22 It was quickly established that the aircraft were poorly suited for their role Due to the high latitude their compasses did not work properly often leaving them without proper navigation Two aircraft were subject to crashes after misnavigation 23 They participated in anti submarine patrols and were part of the capture of U 570 From late 1941 the missions changed focus and the squadron instead took up a role as an air ambulance in Iceland 24 nbsp nbsp RAF Reykjavik nbsp Akureyri nbsp Budareyriclass notpageimage Locations of 330 Squadron bases in Iceland Both Norwegian and British authorities discussed converting the 330 Sqn to use the Lockheed Hudson but the fighter role was instead placed on two new Norwegian squadrons 331 and 332 25 No 330 was instead issued the Consolidated PBY 5A Catalina in June 1942 26 However they were unsuitable for Budareyri and the Northrops were not needed in Reykjavik so the squadron ended up with six each of the Catalina and the Northrop 27 An operating challenge was a lack of spare parts but the Norwegians were helped both with parts and training by a nearby United States Air Force squadron 28 The Catalinas retained the same roles as the Northrops anti submarine sweeping patrol and convoy escort The aircraft rotated between being based at Reykjavik and at Akureyri 29 They successfully hit U 592 on 30 June and U 580 on 25 August 1942 30 In December the Norwegian authorities decided to relocate the 330 Sqn The Akureyri base was immediately ordered to move its aircraft to Reykjavik Operations of the Catalina had commenced in November and of the Northrops in December 31 The C flight continued to operate out of Budareyri until 11 June 1943 During its period on Iceland the squadron flew 4379 hours of which 3524 with the Northrops and 855 with Catalinas 32 Twenty one soldiers were killed 30 Scotland edit The A and B flights departed Iceland for RAF Oban in Scotland on 23 January 1943 33 This involved a switch to the Short Sunderland flying boat These were expensive aircraft which the Norwegian government in exile could not afford The RAF therefore agreed to lend the aircraft to the squadron while operating costs were still paid for by the Norwegians 34 The squadron was set up with six Mk II and six Mk III 35 the latter having somewhat longer range 36 There were technical challenges with the Bristol Pegasus engines which were underpowered and often stopped mid air The situation was often aggravated when the feathering malfunctioned 37 nbsp Short Sunderland of the 330 Sqn The squadron became operative on 20 April 1943 Three days later a detachment was sent to RAF Scatsta in Shetland The role continued as before with submarine sweeping patrol and reconnaissance as well as meteorological surveys They regularly patrolled the areas between Shetland past the Faeroe Islands to Iceland Also active in the area was the Norwegian 333 Squadron and other RAF squadrons 38 The Sunderlands would on occasion partake in aerial combat with German fighters Following the Allied Invasion of Normandy in June 1944 German submarines increasingly moved northwards and the 330 Sqn intensified its sweeping 39 From August the German tactics changed and the 330 Sqn s patrols moved steadily closer to Norway 40 During the period in Scotland the squadron flew 12 000 hours carrying out 655 sweeps and patrols 50 convoy escorts and 22 search and rescue missions Five submarines were attacked sinking one and badly damaging another No ships escorted by the 330 Sqn were sunk Six Sunderlands were lost during the war both due to engine failure and due to enemy action All but one resulted in loss of life 41 In April 1945 the Mk II and III Sunderlands were replaced with Mk V which had more reliable Pratt amp Whitney Twin Wasp 42 At the End of World War II in Europe in May 1945 the 330 Sqn had eleven operational Sunderlands While the fighter squadrons were without work the amount of work for the 330 and 333 Sqn intensified 43 There was a massive need for air transport both from the United Kingdom to Norway and within Norway Both squadrons were transferred to Norway in June with the 330 Sqn being based at the water aerodrome at Sola Air Station These were used on a daily coastal route from there to Bergen Airport Sandviken and Trondheim 44 often onwards to Tromso Airport Skattora 45 Both squadrons were soon operating more as airlines than as military units 44 Command of the squadron was given to the newly formed Royal Norwegian Air Force on 21 November 1945 when RAF withdrew from Norway The 330 Sqn was officially deactivated on 15 December 1945 The aircraft were still owned by the RAF but were not returned until early 1946 Most of the personnel transferred to 333 which had just been relocated to Sola 45 Aircraft operated during World War II editDates Aircraft Variant Notes 25 April 1941 46 Northrop N 3PB Nomad Single engined floatplane patrol bomber torpedo bomber built to a Norwegian specification Jul 1942 46 Consolidated PBY Catalina Twin engined flying boat patrol bomber February 1943 46 March 1943 April 1945 Short S 25 Sunderland II III V Four engined flying boat patrol bomber Thunderjet edit nbsp Heritage Republic F 84G Thunderjet of RNoAF Following Norway s entry into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO and as recipients of the Marshall Plan aid 45 Norway took delivery of its first of 206 Republic F 84 Thunderjets on 10 September 1951 in what would become a delivery of 206 airframes 47 Six squadrons would in the end be set up to operate the aircraft 48 As the deliveries advanced the 330 Squadron was reactivated on 20 July 1953 and stationed at Gardermoen Half the crew were recruited from other F 84G squadrons the rest were freshly trained The first aircraft was acquired on 22 August and by November all had been taken into use After completing its tactical and bombing training at Lista Air Station in March 1954 the squadron was declared operative 45 The squadron had between 22 and 27 airframes while operating the Thunderjets It was originally set to provide interception but from 1 November 1954 it was remissioned to become an operational training unit All F 84G check outs were carried out in the 330 Sqn and the instructor pilots received twice the flight hours as their colleagues in other squadrons 45 Between the training courses the squadron practised bombing at Sola Air Station and participated in exercises The 330 Sqn moved to Rygge Air Station on 28 August 1956 Following the retirement of the F 84G and the introduction of the North American F 86F Sabre the 330 Sqn was deactivated on 5 July 1958 49 Albatross edit nbsp After ending service in Norway the Albatrosses were transferred to the Hellenic Air Force here depicting an ex Norwegian heritage aircraft The 333 Sqn had continued to operate the Catalinas through the 1950s although they by the end of the decade were all but modern The Norwegian authorities agreed to receive eighteen Grumman HU 16B ASW Albatrosses through the Marshall Plan These flying boats were intended for maritime surveillance and transport to Svalbard 50 as well as submarine sweeping 51 330 and 333 Sqn would receive nine airframes each Combined they would provide 8 100 flight hours annual up from 2 400 with the Catalinas Training was carried out by the United States Coast Guard and Air Force 50 The 300 Sqn s first Albatross landed in February 1962 and the unit was activated at Sola Air Station on 1 March Delivery of the final aircraft took place in late 1963 The 330 Sqn was designated the operational training unit and all check outs took place at Sola for both squadrons From late 1962 a detachment was established at Bardufoss Air Station with one aircraft and one crew 49 The 330 Sqn was declared operative from 15 July 1963 The detachment was a strain on the unit s moral and its commanded asked his subordinates to withdraw it and replace it with a mobilized unit The resources used to support the detachment made the 330 Sqn almost unable to provide sweeping operations 50 The Albatrosses improved the sweeping capacity and introduced news technology such as sonar radar and magnetic anomaly detector Norway did not have capacity to sweep its waters and instead focused on the surveillance This allowed both British and American forces to carry out such tasks 52 Despite the leap in technology the Albatrosses were soon declared obsolete Allied Forces Northern Europe determined that they needed full anti submarine capabilities and opted to replace the flying boats with the Lockheed P 3 Orion 53 Five Orions were capable of the same job as eighteen Albatrosses and the number of squadrons was cut to one The 330 Sqn was therefore deactivated on 1 October 1968 49 Sea King edit nbsp Sea King at Bergen Airport Flesland Search and rescue was at the time only a secondary role for various air force units such as the Albatross Bell UH 1B and Bell 47 Norway lacked the dedicated SAR service that Denmark had This became evident in 1966 when the Norwegian ferry Skagerrak sank off the Danish coast in September 1966 Everyone on board was saved but it was questioned whether this would have been the case if the incident had occurred in Norwegian waters 54 The task was given to the Ministry of Justice who as a temporary solution from 1968 to 1973 signed an agreement with Helikopter Service to operate two Sikorsky S 61 out of Sola and Bodo 55 Both a private operation with civilian aircraft a military operation and a joint civilian and military operation were considered A single operator built with a fast roll out would give the lowest investments 56 The Air Force was interested in operating this service to replace its own rescue service to gain political goodwill and to add to the anti submarine capability The latter was rejected by the politicians The Westland Sea King was chosen over the S 61 due to a better offset agreement Parliament approved the purchase of ten helicopters in 1970 57 to be stationed at four bases Sola Orland Bodo and Banak This would allow any location along the coast to be reached within 90 minutes 58 The Oslofjord and Skagerrak was covered by Bell UH 1s of the 720 Squadron at Rygge 56 nbsp Sea King at Orland Main Air Station The 330 Sqn was assigned the SAR task and was headquartered at Bodo Main Air Station with a wing at each location The A flight was at Bodo the B flight at Banak the C flight at Orland and the D flight at Sola Of ten aircraft two were stationed at each base and two were at any given time in for overhaul The flights were re designated as detachments from 1980 The squadron was officially reactivated on 25 April 1973 58 The flights at Sola and Bodo were operative 1 May and the other two on 1 August 59 The first major was on 7 April 1974 when the Banak flight saved 13 lives off the trawler Longvabakk in Oksfjorden 58 Especially among the first officers the SAR service was not what they had imagined when joining the air force and many applied to the Air Force Academy This caused new first officers to be ordered to the 300 Sqn which reinforced the problems resulting in high turnover 59 The Sea Kings were designed to be maritime helicopters but were increasingly used for terrestrial SAR missions and on occasion aerial firefighting 58 Throughout the 1970s the number of air ambulance missions increased dramatically hitting 242 in 1977 56 nbsp Sea King and ambulance during a mission near Bodo On 30 April 1977 one helicopter disappeared off the coast of Sola A replacement helicopter was delivered in January 1978 Three helicopters participated in the most extensive operation following the sinking of Alexander L Kielland on 27 March 1980 On 22 April 1982 another helicopter crashed this time without fatalities when hitting a power line in Sirdal 58 Another such incident occurred on 10 November 1986 near Bodo this time with one fatality In 1988 another helicopter crashed at Tyinvann in 1988 without fatalities and with the aircraft being repaired During the late 1980s the helicopters were often grounded due to lack of spare parts which on 6 July 1988 hindered the unit form participating in aiding the sinking Piper Alpha oil platform 60 The National Air Ambulance Service was inaugurated in 1988 and the 330 Sqn became part of this This involved the acquisition of eight smaller ambulance helicopters later increased to twelve which could relieve the Sea Kings Meanwhile the air ambulance role of the Sea Kings were increased with the inclusions of an anaesthesiologist on board This would also aid in SAR missions where the rescued could be severely injured The task of providing the anaesthesiologist was placed with the county municipality 56 nbsp Sea King during flight The accident in 1988 reduced the fleet to eight This spurred the Ministry of Justice to wet lease the services of the commercial companies Helikopter Service and Morefly respectively operating S 61 and Eurocopter AS332 Super Puma These were placed at Alesund Airport Vigra from 1 November 1988 to 31 January 1989 at Sandefjord Airport Torp from 1 February 1989 to 31 December 1990 and from 1 January to 31 July 1991 at Sola 56 The Sea Kings had two accidents in 1990 and 1991 respectively after which the helicopters needed to be renovated A new Mk 43B was delivered in August 1992 followed by the renovated aircraft from the 1990 crash The main difference was new avionics The squadron then one by one upgraded the avionics on the entire fleet a job completed in 1996 61 The role of the SAR service was evaluated in 1992 and it ended up with Parliament approving the purchase of two more helicopters bringing the total to twelve The two new helicopters were delivered in 1995 62 With the additional helicopters the 330 Sqn could open a new base at Alesund Airport Vigra The goal was to increase the coverage in More og Romsdal and Sogn og Fjordane situated midway between Orland and Sola By 1998 the government instead determined that the extra helicopters should be based in Eastern Norway and moved the base to Rygge Air Station The new base became operational on 22 March 1999 10 This relieved the 720 Sqn for their SAR task for which they neither had suitable aircraft nor the necessary preparedness 63 From 2002 the anaesthesiologist became the responsibility of the respective health trust From 2004 the funding was changed and the 330 Sqn is paid for through the Ministry of Justice and the Police From the start the service had a reaction time from alarm to airborne of 60 minutes Sola was the first base to receive an on call room allowing the response time to be lowered to 15 minutes This proved successful and was introduced at Banak in 2006 Bodo in 2007 and Orland and Rygge in 2008 A sixth base was opened at Floro Airport in 2009 1 The 330 Squadron was featured in an eight episode television documentary series of the same name broadcast by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation in 2009 64 AW101 edit nbsp A Norwegian Leonardo AW101 SAR Queen helicopter 2017 The replacement of the Sea Kings was first discussed in a Norwegian Official Report in 1997 65 In competition with the AgustaWestland AW101 the Eurocopter AS532 Cougar and the Sikorsky S 92 Norway ordered fourteen NHIndustries NH90 helicopters in 2001 to meet the needs of the Royal Norwegian Navy Options would be places for a future ten SAR helicopters and fifteen troop transports By operating only one class of helicopters the Air Force hoped to cut costs 66 The Ministry of Justice canceled the options in 2007 and instead initiated a new procurement process This resulted in a project organization being established Norwegian All Weather Search and Rescue Helicopter NAWSARH The procurement was in cooperation with Icelandic authorities 67 The project prequalified four models NH90 AW101 EC 725 and S 92 On 8 November 2013 the project announced that it had selected AgustaWestland as the provider The contract is for sixteen units with an option for a further six The first helicopter were delivered in 2017 AW101 will replace Sea King base for base with Sola Air base declared operative with the new helicopters September 1st 2020 At the same time it was revealed that AW101 in Norwegian service will be named SAR Queen 68 Orland Air base was the next to be operative in May 2021 69 The last Sea King retired by December 12th 2023 when it was replaced by a SAR Queen at Bodo Air station 70 Fleet editThe following is a list of the fleet composition of the 330 Sqd The quantity qty specifies the peak number of simultaneously operated aircraft Fleet Aircraft Qty Period Northrop N 3PB 18 1941 43 Consolidated PBY Catalina 6 1942 43 Short Sunderland II 6 1943 45 Short Sunderland III 6 1943 45 Short Sunderland V 12 1945 Republic F 84G Thunderjet 27 1953 58 Grumman HU 16 Albatross 18 1962 68 Westland Sea King 12 1973 2023 AgustaWestland AW101 16 2020 PresentPersonnel editNils Arveschoug Christian Roy Kaldager Stefan Kutzsche Oluf Reed Olsen Einar Sverre PedersenReferences edit a b c Ministry of Justice and the Police 9 NOU 32 a b c Ministry of Justice and the Police 10 Super Puma overtar for Sea King i den norske redningstjenesten Tu no September 2017 Ministry of Justice and the Police 17 Ministry of Justice and the Police 19 Ministry of Justice and the Police 12 Ministry of Justice and the Police 14 Ministry of Justice and the Police 22 a b Hjelle 133 Banak in Norwegian National Air Ambulance Service Retrieved 5 December 2014 Bodo in Norwegian National Air Ambulance Service Retrieved 12 December 2014 Floro in Norwegian National Air Ambulance Service Retrieved 12 December 2014 Orland in Norwegian National Air Ambulance Service Retrieved 12 December 2014 Rygge in Norwegian National Air Ambulance Service Retrieved 12 December 2014 Sola in Norwegian National Air Ambulance Service Retrieved 12 December 2014 Glenne 420 a b Henriksen 127 a b Henriksen 128 a b Henriksen 131 Henriksen 129 Henriksen 141 Glenne 421 Glenne 422 Henriksen 164 Henriksen 166 Henriksen 167 Henriksen 168 Henriksen 170 a b Henriksen 179 Henriksen 176 Henriksen 178 Henriksen 439 Henriksen 441 Henriksen 443 Henriksen 442 Henriksen 444 Henriksen 451 Henriksen 465 Henriksen 479 Henriksen 481 Arheim 85 Duvsete 19 a b Duvsete 21 a b c d e Arheim 86 a b c Jefford 1988 p 86 Glenne 446 Glenne 447 a b c Arheim 87 a b c Duvsete 319 Duvsete 321 Duvsete 323 Duvsete 325 Duvsete 352 Duvsete 353 a b c d e NOU 23 Duvsete 354 a b c d e Arheim 88 a b Duvsete 356 Arheim 89 Arheim 90 Arheim 91 St meld nr 44 2000 2001 Redningshelikoptertjenesten i fremtiden PDF in Norwegian Ministry of Justice and the Police 11 May 2001 Retrieved 12 December 2014 Kjolleberg Even 11 March 2009 330 skvadronen in Norwegian Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 9 September 2012 NOU 16 Aldstedt Finn 4 October 2000 Velger enhetshelikopter Adresseavisen in Norwegian p 20 Ministry of Justice and the Police 7 Overtar for Sea King Nytt redningshelikopter har fatt nytt navn Tu no September 2020 Orland er operative med SAR Queen Forsvaret Dallokken Per Erlien 11 May 2021 Kostnadssmell for nye redningshelikoptre Peker pa forsinkelser og ombygging pa sykehus Teknisk Ukeblad in Norwegian Retrieved 17 November 2021 Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Westland Sea King in service with Norway Arheim Tom Hafsten Bjorn Olsen Bjorn Thuve Sverre 1994 Fra Spitfire til F 16 Luftforsvaret 50 ar 1944 1994 in Norwegian Oslo Sem amp Stenersen ISBN 82 7046 068 0 Duvsete Svein 2004 Luftforsvarets historie Kalde krigere og barmhjertige samartaner in Norwegian Oslo Aschehoug ISBN 82 03 22071 1 Glenne Roar 2012 Oppdrag utfort Norges luftmilitaere kulturarv in Norwegian Oslo Forsvarsmuseet ISBN 978 82 91218 55 7 Hjelle Bjorn Owe 2007 Alesund lufthavn Vigra in Norwegian Valderoya ISBN 978 82 92055 28 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Henriksen Vera 1996 Luftforsvarets historie Fem ar i utlegd in Norwegian Oslo Aschehoug ISBN 82 03 22070 3 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Aircraft Part Work 1982 1985 Orbis Publishing Jefford C G 1988 RAF Squadrons Airlife Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 85310 053 6 Ministry of Justice and the Police Prop 146 S 2010 2011 Anskaffelse av nye redningshelikoptre mv i perioden 2013 2020 PDF in Norwegian Retrieved 12 December 2014 NOU 1997 3 Om Redningshelikoptertjenesten PDF Norwegian Official Report in Norwegian Ministry of Justice and the Police 1997 Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2014 Retrieved 12 December 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title No 330 Squadron RNoAF amp oldid 1224141151, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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