Akhtubinsk (air base)
| Akhtubinsk | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akhtubinsk, Astrakhan Oblast in Russia | |||||||||
Satellite imagery of Akhtubinsk air base | |||||||||
| Site information | |||||||||
| Type | Air Base | ||||||||
| Owner | Ministry of Defence | ||||||||
| Operator | Russian Aerospace Forces | ||||||||
| Location | |||||||||
| Coordinates | 48°18′31″N 46°12′15″E / 48.30861°N 46.20417°E | ||||||||
| Site history | |||||||||
| Built | 1948 | ||||||||
| In use | 1948 - present | ||||||||
| Battles/wars | 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine | ||||||||
| Airfield information | |||||||||
| Identifiers | ICAO: URWH | ||||||||
| Elevation | 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) AMSL | ||||||||
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Akhtubinsk is a military base that belongs to Russian aviation research and testing military institution 929th State Flight Test Centre named for V. P. Chkalov located at Akhtubinsk, Astrakhan Oblast, Russia.
The then-State Red Banner GK Scientific Research Institute VVS was moved to the base from Chkalov in Moscow Oblast in 1960, and the 1st (fighters and fighter-bombers), 2nd (bombers), 5th (radio range), 9th (route measuring complex), and 10th (nuclear test) Scientific-Experimental Departments of the Institute were set up at Akhtubinsk that year.
In 1990 the institute received its current name.
The aerodrome was in use for testing as early as 1948; in June 1948, V. D. Lutsenko, a test pilot and Hero of the Soviet Union crashed in an aircraft of unknown type. On October 27, 1949, test pilot E.S. Greenfield died in a crash of a La-15 aircraft at Akhtubinsk during the first show of aviation equipment. On April 9, 1963 test pilot V. I. Grotsky died during a test flight of a Sukhoi Su-7B fighter-bomber aircraft near Akhtubinsk airfield.