McDonnell Douglas Hornet CF-188/A/B CF-18/A/B
The CF-188 Hornet, commonly called the CF-18, is a multi-role fighter aircraft. It is used for air defence, air superiority, ground attack, tactical support, training, aerobatic demonstration, and aerospace testing and evaluation.
The Hornet is a fast, light and manoeuvrable aircraft. Because of its power, speed and target-tracking capabilities, it has had great success in many military operations in Canada and around the world.
CF-18s have supported North American Aerospace Defence Command (NORAD) air sovereignty patrols and participated in combat during the Gulf War in 1991, the Kosovo War in the late 1990s, and as part of the Canadian contribution to the international Libyan no-fly zone in 2011. CF-18s were also part of the Canadian contribution to the military intervention against ISIL, Operation Impact. RCAF Web Page and Wikipedia
CASPIR Aircraft Groups:
RCAF Owned (165) RCAF 400 Squadrons (138) Canadian Crewed (139) Canadian Museum (3)Hornet (CF-188) F/A-18A 188747
Equivalent to F-18A-16-MC when delivered. Used at CFB Cold Lake, Alberta and CFB Baden, Germany in 1980s and 1990s. With 421 Squadron, 1st Canadian Air Division at CFB Solingen, Germany in 1991. Also with 439 Squadron in Europe, dates not known. With 433 Escadrille tactique de combat at CFB Bagotville, Quebec in February 1995. Received ECP avionics update. At CFB Cold Lake, Alberta, with 416 Squadron markings, in April 2006. Believed to be operated by Aerospace Engineering Test Establishment at this time. Being operated by Fighter Operational Test and Evaluation Flight at China Lake, California on 27 October 2006, when it experienced a near miss with CF-188 188744. Investigation cited hurried briefing after last minute crew changes in multi-ship mission over China Lake range. With 410 Squadron at Cold Lake, dates not known. Visited Edmonton City airport in July 2009, as part of display for car race held on the airport. At Cold Lake in 2010, operated by 409 Squadron. Reported active at CFB Cold Lake in April 2016, with 5,294 airframe hours. On 28 Nov 2016, this a/c was part of a two-ship formation for an unopposed air interdiction continuation training mission. The mission objective was to deliver two MK83 inert bombs followed by two laser-guided training rounds, simulating laser guided bombs, in the Cold Lake Air Weapons Range. To avoid the simulated bomb fragmentation after dropping their bombs the pilots were to fly a safe escape maneuver comprising a 5 g level turn (which required a 78 degree bank angle to maintain level flight) through 90 degrees of heading change. The a/c failed to execute the required escape maneuver and crashed into the ground while in a descending turn. The pilot, Capt. T. McQueen, failed to eject and was killed.1985-08-21 Taken on Strength 2019-08-20
2016-11-28 Struck off Strength Cat “A” crash; written-off 2021-11-13