Pacific Missile Range Facility
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
The Pacific Missile Range Facility, Barking Sands (Template:Comma separated entries) is a U.S. naval facility and airport located five nautical miles (9 km) northwest of the central business district of Kekaha, in Kauai County, Hawaii, United States.[1]
PMRF is the world's largest instrumented, multi-dimensional testing and training missile range.[2] The US military and its contractors favor its relative isolation, ideal year-round tropical climate and encroachment-free environment (see PMRF Agriculture Preservation Initiative below). It is the only range in the world where submarines, surface ships, aircraft and space vehicles can operate and be tracked simultaneously. There are over Template:Convert of instrumented underwater range and over Template:Convert of controlled airspace. The base itself covers roughly Template:Convert.
The base includes a Template:Convert runway with operations and maintenance facilities. It has roughly 70 housing units and various recreational facilities for those who can access the base.
The base has support facilities at Port Allen, Makaha Ridge, and Koke'e State Park. The base also uses a portion of the nearby island of Niihau for a remotely operated APS-134 surveillance radar, an Template:Convert Test Vehicle Recovery Site, the Perch Electronic Warfare site, multiple EW Portable Simulator sites, and a Helicopter Terrain Flight training course.
History
In 1921, the land area known as the Barking Sands was acquired by the Kekaha Sugar Company and became a runway for private planes. In 1928 Charles Kingsford Smith, a record-setting Australian aviator, took off with his four-man crew from a sandy runway here to fly non-stop to Fiji. They had arrived in Hawaii at Wheeler Army Airfield, but left from Barking Sands as Wheeler was not long enough to take off with their heavy load. The U.S. Army acquired the land in 1940, named it Mana Airport, and paved the runway. Additional land acquired in 1941 expanded the facility to Template:Convert. Private airlines frequently utilized the airport, and World War II incurred a great deal of military flight operations. The base was officially designated Bonham Air Force Base in 1954. U.S. Navy operations at Bonham began in 1956, with testing of the Regulus I missile. In 1958, the Pacific Missile Range Facility was established to support the growing demand of the Navy at Bonham. In 1964, the Pacific Missile Range Facility and Bonham was transferred to the Navy, becoming Pacific Missile Range Facility, Barking Sands.[3]
Missile tests
In 1962, the U.S. military conducted the Frigate Bird Test of the Operation Dominic program near PMRF. The military launched an operational ballistic missile with a live warhead from the Template:USS, which was situated near PMRF. The nuclear warhead flew toward Christmas Island and detonated in an air burst at Template:Convert.
The Navy is currently using PMRF to test "hit to kill" technology using direct collision of the anti-ballistic missile with its target.[4] This destroys the target by using only kinetic energy from the force of the collision. The two Missile Defense Agency programs that currently utilize the range at PMRF are the Navy's Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System and the Army's Terminal High Altitude Area Defense System, or THAAD. The THAAD program relocated their testing operations from the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico and conducted its first demonstration at PMRF on 26 January 2007.
On 27 April 2007, the U.S. military's sea-based missile defense system, the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense System, showed it could intercept two targets simultaneously when it destroyed a cruise missile and a short-range ballistic missile during a test off the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The test marked eight out of ten times the Missile Defense Agency and U.S. Navy's Aegis missile defense system successfully intercepted its target, but was the first time the system knocked out two targets at the same time.
Script error: No such module "Gallery".
PMRF Agriculture Preservation Initiative
The Navy is currently working with the State of Hawaii and Kauai County to ensure the long-term viability of PMRF. For many decades, the land adjacent to PMRF was used for sugarcane fields, which was wholly compatible with operations at PMRF.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Since Kekaha Sugar's closure, the Navy has become wary of "encroachment", incompatible developments, that might occur on the land next to the base. In order to ensure that PMRF can continue to safely conduct important research and training operations in the future, the Navy and some citizens of Kauai are seeking to permanently preserve the land adjacent to PMRF for agricultural purposes. Under the PMRF Agriculture Preservation Initiative the Navy would have the roughly Template:Convert of land adjacent to PMRF preserved solely for agricultural use. Although the Navy has stated that it would like to lease about Template:Convert of land, it has also stated that its main goal is not to purchase more land but to merely ensure the land continues to be used for agricultural purposes.[5]
Operational deployment of THAAD
When North Korea threatened to launch Taepodong-2 ICBMs toward Hawaii in 2009, the US temporarily deployed a THAAD missile unit to the facility.[6]
Range programs
The range hosted the following programs:[7]
- Able III & IV
- ADTS
- Atlas
- Bullpup (A) & (B)
- Caleb Satellite
- Centaur
- Composite Radiation Satellite
- Corvus I
- Courier
- Discoverer
- Dyna-Soar
- Eagle
- Falcon
- Hawk
- Hummingbird
- Hydra
- Hyperjet
- Jaguar (Probe)
- Mach 2 Expendable Target
- Mach 2 Recoverable Target
- Mercury
- Midas
- Minuteman
- MORT (Fleet Training)
- NERV
- Nike-Zeus
- NORT (Fleet Training)
- Ozarc
- Pershing
- Phoenix
- Regulus I
- Rella
- Samos-Atlas
- Scout
- Sergeant
- Sidewinder
- Sparrow III
- Sunflare
- Talos
- Tartar
- Tepee
- Terrier I
- Thor
- Tiros
- Titan
- Tophat
- Transit
- Tumbleweed
- Typhon
See also
- Eastern Test Range
- Hawaii World War II Army Airfields
- List of United States Navy airfields
- WWVH, a time signal radio station on the grounds of the PMRF
Notes
References
- Template:Air Force Historical Research Agency
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
External links
- Pacific Missile Range Facility Barking Sands, official website
- PMRF Agriculture Preservation Initiative
- Template:Usurped at NavyUSA.org
- Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) / NS Barking Sands at GlobalSecurity.org
- Resources for this airport:
- FAA airport information for BKH
- AirNav airport information for PHBK
- ASN accident history for BKH
- FlightAware airport information and live flight tracker
- NOAA/NWS latest weather observations for PHBK
- SkyVector aeronautical chart for BKH
Template:US Proving Grounds Template:USAAF 7th Air Force World War II Script error: No such module "Navbox". Template:Authority control
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>tag; no text was provided for refs namedFAA - ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Usurped NavyUSA.com retrieved 15 May 2014
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Missiles and Rockets, November 21, 1960, p. 14.
- Pages with script errors
- Pages using infobox military installation with unknown parameters
- 1940 establishments in Hawaii
- Airfields of the United States Army Air Forces in Hawaii
- Airports in Hawaii
- Buildings and structures in Kauai County, Hawaii
- Guided missiles
- Installations of the United States Navy in Hawaii
- Kauai
- Military airbases established in 1940
- Missile defense
- Rocket launch sites in the United States
- Pages with reference errors