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Heliport
20th Nov 2003, 01:12
from BBC NEWS Flying firm wins £3m contract

Wales' only commercial helicopter company has won a £3m defence contract to provide support for missile testing off the coast of Wales.
Veritair, which is based in Cardiff, will station a new helicopter at the former military base in Aberporth, west Wales, to carry out the work.

The company has been awarded the contract by QinetiQ - formerly the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency - to provide helicopter support at the range and a recovery system to fish out targets used in missile tests from Cardigan Bay.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/39580000/jpg/_39580375_targethelicopter203300.jpg

Veritair currently carries out similar work at ranges at Benbecula in the Scottish Outer Hebrides.

Captain Julian Verity said the procedure involved demanding and exacting flying and had taken several years to perfect.
"We've been operating at Aberporth on an ad hoc basis for the last four years," he added. "This contract could be the first step in the expansion of Aberporth for defence purposes."

Aberporth was hit hard in July 2002 when the Ministry of Defence announced that 147 jobs would be axed as part of a defence facility shake-up at the testing base there.

Part of the airfield has been turned into a base for a four-plane air charter service which was launched in May.

The first phase of a technology park there which could create 230 jobs is expected to be completed by next summer.

The air range facility used by the Ministry of Defence is also based near to the airfield.

Veritair was established in 1982 and its headquarters is at a heliport base in Cardiff.

The new twin-engine helicopter being bought for Aberporth will increase the company's fleet to three.

PANews
20th Nov 2003, 07:39
I understood some time ago that Veritair were using BO105 BTKL [in the photo] for this contract. Unfortunately that bubble is slightly burst by the BBC text talking about a 'new aircraft'....

Anyway before that little bubble was burst the understood game plan was that BTKL would pick up the new contract [as in the MoD one] and be moved off the existing British Transport contract [police patrols included] in favour of AS355F2 G-EPOL that they were buying off Essex Police.

The EPOL deal is a long time to signing, apparently some trouble over ripping out the autopilot to save weight for the new operator and it not proving that popular in todays climate.

Perhaps someone can fill in the gaps.

misterbonkers
20th Nov 2003, 13:37
Urm, to correct the record, there is a commercial helicopter outfit based at Hawarden Airport, and thats in Wales!

Where does the press get its bogus info from?

Helinut
20th Nov 2003, 17:42
The way that the lazy media works it almost certainly got the whole piece from a Veritair press release, and then just cut and paste........