A British Typhoon fighter has landed on a road in Finland as part of an exercise.

The demonstration was part of efforts to develop RAF plans to be able to deploy the jets from dispersed locations.

The RAF’s overarching goal with such exercises aligns with the strategy of Agile Combat Employment (ACE). ACE necessitates that RAF personnel and assets remain flexible and agile.

As the RAF said previously, this strategy requires “operating in austere locations with minimal support, constantly moving and changing location to maintain the initiative, and outpace any action from an adversary whether in the UK or overseas alongside our NATO and Joint Expeditionary Force partners.”

Recently, as part of these efforts, Royal Air Force Typhoons were involved in an unexpected relocation exercise to bolster the resilience of UK’s air defence.

RAF Typhoons relocate in surprise dispersal exercise

As part of Exercise Agile Pirate, four Typhoons from XI(F) Squadron at RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire received sudden orders to transfer to MOD Boscombe Down in Wiltshire.

Wing Commander Paul Hanson, Detachment Commander, reflected on the nature of the exercise: “Moving at pace presents its own challenges and we have pushed some assumptions to move even faster. Agile Combat Employment will change our current mindset and way of operating, and I think in many ways it will bring the very best out in our people; ready to deploy at shorter notice, taking part in more novel activity, and operating without the usual support structures of a main operating base.”

In readiness, the Typhoons were stationed in secure aircraft shelters. Upon receiving a scramble call from Tactical Air Command and Control (Tac Air C2), they were airborne within minutes.

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52 COMMENTS

  1. This great to practice. Hopefully they can practice having the full crews, fuel trucks, weapons able to turn the aircraft round.
    Getting typhoon the ability to do this is important. I’ve heard the a lot of jets depend on large equipment at large bases to keep the aircraft flying. The gripen was made to be able to disperse from the start.
    Hopefully tempest and the drones will have dispersal and ease of turn around built in as big airbases are extremely vulnerable

      • The mig29 has intake covers to make it more rugged and Soviet aircraft were meant to be easier to maintain. How that actually works in practice with the hodgepodge of aircraft Russia has now is anyone’s guess.
        Just put tyres on it instead🙈

  2. Not sure but last time the RAF were taking off roads was back in the day with Jaguars in the UK and Germany .But well done to the RAF SQN doing this with Typhoons has Jags were built in mind for this type of situation don’t think it was ever intended for Typhoons .But with lack of AD to procet airfields it makes good sense 👍 🇬🇧 🇫🇮

    • Looking at what’s going on in Ukraine, with the quantities of missiles and drones that the Russians are using in their strikes on the Ukrainian air bases, GBAD just won’t be able to keep up- only reduce the damage.
      Dispersal and austere operating, what the RAF is practicing here, is what has keep the Ukrainian Air Force in the fight.

  3. The road looks better then 99% of British roads. No pot holes or patch work repairs.
    Probably a better surface to land on then even an RAF airstrip.🫣

  4. They experimented with this back in the early Jaguar days. A comment from one pilot suggested it is not something that he saw as being viable, said something like a real star might pull it off but the typical pilot would divert to another base rather than use the road.

    If all runways are damaged it might be the only option but expect a few mishaps to occur…

    • You have to bear in mind, the Jag’s take-off and landing distances. The Typhoon by comparison puts it to shame. The Jag was seriously underpowered, it had a take-off distance worse than a Tornados on a hot day at a high elevation, especially if it was carrying ordinance.

      The Typhoon has a pretty good short take-off and landing (STOL) capability. Though not quite as good as the Gripen. The Typhoon’s really good power to weight ratio and the coupled canard-delta wing design, is key for its STOL capability.

      • Presume trial(s) will eventually be replicated in UK? Demonstration of capability in an expeditionary environment certainly useful, but believe odds favor home field requirement.

        • Both Typhoon and F35B have now been deployed to RAF airfields that have been put into care and maintenance. These are still part of the MoD estate. But the sites are no longer used as main operating bases. They are usually a bit run down. But the main runways are still useable and cared for.

          For the Samsonite brigade (fixed wing RAF) these are baby steps. They haven’t done austere ops since the Harrier days. When operating from Afghan. The Tornados had a purpose built pan, hangerage and air conditioned buildings to support the “Expeditionary Air Wing” at Kandahar.

          To start these types of Ops from a clean sheet requires lots of planning and ensuring you have the right logistical support at the deployed site. But it only really becomes successful after some trial and error. Hopefully they’ll get a few ex-rotary wing guys to help.

  5. During the Cold War days in West Germany dispersal exercise with planes especially with RAF Harriers where routine but also with other fighter jets. The Swiss use roads as runways for their air force. Now NATO military is back from Iraq & Afghanistan, including UK military. The Army & Airforce are back to training to defend and live of the land in Northern Europe and the different seasonal weather that brings, including artic and mountain warfare in Scandinavia. The Cold War has disastrously morphed into a Hot War in an area on European Mainland.

  6. One of the reasons the carriers and F35B are so important….a fully functional airfield that can move and hide in the vast sea is really important…..airfields are alway vulnerable no matter how much air defence you put up around them.

      • Indeed…..they are defended by one of the most complex and effective integrated air defence systems in the world…an air defence system that component parts also move and hide in the same seas…land based air defence systems chained to an airfield as they are can be very susceptible to SEAD/DEAD, they are known and located, therefore vulnerable….a carrier battle groups air defence system is far harder to find, let alone suppress or destroy.

    • Also Helicopter OutLying Fields in support of ship-shore beach assault by marines ultimately. This time with pilot still onboard, though.

    • The good thing about land based airfields is that they can be hit and repaired many times over, i.e. they do not sink, unlike aircraft carriers, which take years to replace.

  7. That road is 4 lanes without a central reservation.

    The wingspan of a typhoon is around 11 metres.

    Which is about 4 lanes width – so it should be possible to land on a motorway carriageway ( 3 lanes and a hard shoulder ) – doubt there are many other roads in the U.K. that are straight for a couple of miles , has 11 metres of unobstructed width ( with no trees or signs that might reduce that 11 metres ).

    Most A roads that wide will have a central reservation or barrier or islands or something on them.

      • It was the M55 at Blackpool ( well Weeton ) about 4 miles from BAe Warton ( I think it was written BAe at the time ) and 3 miles from Blackpool Airport.

        The M55 had just been completed and wasn’t open yet – I think – it also didn’t have any signs, cats eyes, etc installed yet.

        Edit – the Jaguar wingspan is also about 9ft smaller than both the Typhoon and the F35B.

  8. It’s worth pointing out that to do this you do have to have roads that are designed to allow this….specifically very strait bits of wide road the right length and built to runway standards…also maintained……not sure how many strait 8000 meter long, very wide bits of maintained runway quality roads you will find in the UK.

    • I keep reading they planned to use the A1M in the Cold War. You also need space to leave to a hidden dispersal, not so easy with motorways flanked by embankment, or raised on one. I’m trying to visualise Fleet Services on the M3 whether you’d get a Typhoon down the slip road!

      To be sure, the MoD will have contingency for this and places already decided. Resourcing such detachments with enough staff from Fire to Armaments to RAF Reg STO/FP dets another matter.

      • Can they not pull into the little chef/BP petrol station off the motorway. The ground crew can stay at the holiday inn😂😂😂😂

        • Ahhhh, now there is a name from the past…Little Chef. The “Olympic Breakfast” 😋 I’d always have one of those. They all closed and now there are pointless ( for us at least ) Starbucks and Costa Coffee where ever you go.

      • Well spotted I got over excited typing the zeros and and meant 800meters…an 8km long runway requirement would be a bit over the top. My understanding is a typhoon minimum take off is 700meters fully loaded..but you need extra space beyond that…..your not going to have the road do a right hand turn at 700meters…that would be asking for it. So 800meters seem safe….

  9. That’s the classic difference between yer 4th & 5th Gen. Yer 5th Gen prefers no pilot and, err, no road.
    More apposite regarding very austere landing strips, I’ll still bang the drum for light attack single prop aircraft like AT6E as potential cost-effective counter to KA52 & ilk.

    • It is the same place ( I live in Finland). For the particulars, note this exercise involved Finnish Hornets, Norwegian F35a’s, and British Typhoons. My understanding is the ground crew and ground assets were all Finnish assets as the actual exercise is a Finnish exercise with the addition of practising refueling allied aircraft (which is the NEW part of the annual exercise). Finnish Hornets and the rest of their military do this thing as part of standard exercises.

      Should also be noted part of the original Norwegian selection of the F35a’s was it had to be able to take off/land from such improvised airways so this isn’t a case of a 5th gen fighter being inherently more finicky than a 4th…

    • Good clip, and jag lands on one side of motorway with central crash barrier in place. French wanted them for carrier duty. High intakes and wings and long legs.

  10. Singapore has sections of its motorway network that can take plans, the central reservation is flower beds that can be moved out the way and areas either side for aircraft.

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