No. 163 Squadron RAF

No. 163 Squadron RAF was a Royal Air Force Squadron that was a communications and light bomber unit in World War II.

No. 163 Squadron RAF
Active1 Jun 1918 – 17 Aug 1918
10 Jul 1942 – 16 Jun 1943
15 Jan 1945 – 10 Aug 1945
Country United Kingdom
Branch Royal Air Force
Motto(s)No motto

History

Formation and World War I

No. 163 Squadron Royal Flying Corps was formed on 1 June 1918, but it was not equipped with any aircraft and was disbanded on 17 August 1918 without becoming operational.

Reformation in World War II

de Havilland Mosquito

The squadron reformed on 10 July 1942 at Asmara, Egypt, and equipped with Hudson aircraft that operated a mail and communications service to Khartoum, Sudan, and other African countries. It was disbanded on 16 June 1943 and reformed at RAF Wyton on 15 January 1945 as a Mosquito Squadron on operations over Germany as part of the Night Striking Force, it finally disbanded on 10 August 1945.

Aircraft operated

Aircraft operated by No. 163 Squadron RAF[1]
FromToAircraftVariant
Jul 1942Aug 1942Lockheed HudsonIIIA
Jul 1942Dec 1942Lockheed HudsonVI
Jan 1945Aug 1945de Havilland MosquitoXXV
May 1945Aug 1945de Havilland MosquitoXVI
gollark: This seems like fairly bad code.
gollark: Specifically, the ice floored ones we use for the ICBM.
gollark: They would go down dedicated tunnels.
gollark: Hmm, idea: bulk item shipment via drones through the nether.
gollark: Also we don't actually have spatial IO.

References

  1. C.G.Jefford (1988). RAF Squadrons. UK Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-85310-053-6.
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