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Asas de Portugal

Asas de Portugal
(Wings of Portugal)
Asas Portugal Vigo 2009.JPG
Asas de Portugal
Active 1977–1990
1997–1998
2001
2005–2010
Country Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal
Branch Roundel of Portugal.svg Portuguese Air Force
Role Aerobatic display team
Size 2 Pilots
8 Support
Air Base Air Base No. 11, Portugal
Equipment 2 Alpha Jet A attack/trainer aircraft
Insignia
Identification
symbol
Asas de Portugal logo.png
Aircraft flown
Attack (1997—2010) Dassault/Dornier Alpha Jet A
Trainer (1977—1992) Cessna T-37C

The Asas De Portugal (Wings of Portugal) was a flight demonstration team created in 1977 integrated with Esquadra 103 (103 Squadron) of the Portuguese Air Force. It was Portugal's national aerobatic flying team and flew two ex-Luftwaffe Dassault-Breguet/Dornier Alpha Jets.

In 1977, Asas de Portugal was created by order of the Air Force Chief of Staff (CEMFA), with the objective to represent the Portuguese Air Force (PoAF) at the International Air Tattoo air festival. This was the third aerobatics team established by the PoAF, after two teams of the 1950s — the Dragões (Dragons) and the São Jorge (Saint George) teams.

Asas de Portugal operated the Cessna T-37C for 13 years while integrated with the 102 Squadron Panchos.

The single fatal accident in the team's history occurred on 9 December 1990, when one of its T-37Cs suffered a catastrophic wing structural failure during a practice session, killing team pilot José Magalhães da Costa. The accident prompted a fleet-wide inspection which revealed that all but five T-37 aircraft in the PoAF inventory suffered from fatigue induced micro-cracks in the wings' structure. Repairs to airworthy status were considered financially inadvisable. This conclusion, together with a restructure of the PoAF in the 1990s, led to the phase-out of the T-37 and an interruption of the team's activities.

In 1997 the team was reactivated, being integrated with the 103 Squadron Caracóis and equipped with Dassault-Breguet/Dornier Alpha Jet aircraft, having a team of seven officer pilots and a maintenance team. The first public appearance with the Alpha Jet was on June 27, 1997, at the commemorations of the PoAF's 45th anniversary in Sintra.


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