Sleap Airfield

Sleap Airfield

A view of the airfield from the north
IATA: noneICAO: EGCV
Summary
Airport type Private
Operator Shropshire Aero Club Ltd
Location Shrewsbury
Elevation AMSL 275 ft / 84 m
Coordinates 52°50′05″N 002°46′13″W / 52.83472°N 2.77028°W / 52.83472; -2.77028Coordinates: 52°50′05″N 002°46′13″W / 52.83472°N 2.77028°W / 52.83472; -2.77028
Map
EGCV

Location in Shropshire

Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
05/23 799 2,621 Asphalt
18/36 775 2,543 Asphalt
Sources: UK AIP at NATS[1]

Sleap Airfield (IATA: n/a, ICAO: EGCV) is located 10 NM (19 km; 12 mi) north of Shrewsbury,[1] Shropshire, England.

Sleap Aerodrome has a CAA Ordinary Licence (Number P641) that allows flights for the public transport of passengers or for flying instruction as authorised by the licensee (Shropshire Aero Club Limited).[2]

RAF Sleap

Sleap (pronounced "Slape") is an ex-Royal Air Force airfield, which was opened in April 1943, and used by RAF advanced flying training units. Initially it was the base for No. 81 Operational Training Unit RAF (OTU) within No. 93 Group RAF of RAF Bomber Command equipped with Armstrong Whitworth Whitley bomber aircraft.

From 1 January 1944 Sleap was assigned to the RAF's No.38 Group, Airborne Forces. 81 OTU's Whitleys towed Horsa heavy troop-carrying gliders on training missions and the Horsas made practice formation landings at Sleap to simulate the attacks to come on German-occupied territory. Vickers Wellingtons replaced the Whitleys from November 1944 and by January 1945 the strength was 51 T.Xs, being used to train Transport Command air crews. The RAF finally released Sleap in 1964, but the location is still used as a relief airfield by nearby RAF Shawbury for Squirrel helicopter training.

The Shropshire Aero Club members' bar (also a cafe open to the public) at Sleap is named after Bayston Hill born Flight Lieutenant Eric Lock the World War II Battle of Britain pilot who was the highest scoring British-born pilot with sixteen and a half victories during the epic battle. There is also the Wartime Aircraft Recovery Group museum open at weekends.

References

External links

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