aviation - the past, present and future of flight

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W


ith the RAF Shackleton AEW.2s
of 8 Squadron nearing the end
of their service the unit wanted
to host a spectacular event.
A piece of serendipity provided the perfect
opportunity for an impressive gathering of
aircraft at RAF Lossiemouth in Scotland.
“The interesting static display would put
most of this year’s open days to shame,”
was how the enthusiast publication British
Aviation Review described it.

What was that magic formula? It was
called ‘All the Eights’ and involved the officer
commanding (OC) 8 Sqn, Wg Cdr Dave
Hencken, inviting representatives of NATO
units with the number eight in their title. They
were asked to ‘associ-eight’ and ‘celebr-eight’
their common membership of NATO at eight
minutes past eight GMT, on the eighth day of
the eighth month, 1988.
Only by meticulous planning did all those
units with shared nomenclature gather in

the same place on a once-in-a-century date
of 8.8.88. This was largely the work of the
then Flt Lt Andrew Thomas, an aviation
historian and navigator who was serving as a
tactical co-ordinator (TACO) in the noisy and
cramped interior of a Shackleton ‘ ying radar
station’. Enthusiastically supported by his
OC, Thomas turned a mess ‘happy hour’ idea
from the previous year into reality.
With the basic plan in place, the next task
was to determine how many ‘eight’ squadrons

ALL THE EIGHTSALL THE EIGHTSALL THE EIGHTS


Thirty years ago, the Shackleton AEW.2-equipped 8 Squadron hosted a


memorable event on Monday 8-8-88 which drew aircraft from across NATO.


26 Aviation News incorporating Jets August 2018

A UP-3A Orion, 150527/JB-04, from the US Navy’s experimental
squadron VXN-8, based at NAS Patuxent River, Maryland.

ALL THE EIGHTSALL THE EIGHTS


EXCLUSIVE


26-28_shackletonDC.mfDC.mfDC.mfDC.mfDC.mf.indd 26 06/07/2018 16:22

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