Brief history
The first Naval aviators were trained at the Escuela de Aviación Militar in 1916. By then the naval aviation service did not exist yet but this was soon to change. In 1919 they received their first aircraft from Britain. This was in fact a compensation payment for the embargoed warships that were being built in British dockyards during the First World War. This early fleet consisted of floatplanes, a common practise with fledgling Latino naval air arms. Small numbers of float equipped Short 184, Sopwith Baby, and Avro 504 were delivered during that first year of its existence followed by a single Felixstowe F2A flying boat in 1920.
Ship borne operations were executed with floatplanes being based on naval cruisers. The first base was improvised near Valparaiso in 1921 and in 1923 the naval aviation activities were officially recognised and a branch within the Armada was formed by decree. In 1925 the force was doubled in strength with the arrival of the first acquisitions (Dornier Wall flying boats, Fairey IIIF and more Avro 504N) and the naval air arm took up residence at Quintero air base. This first leash of life of naval aviation was rather short-lived, on paper at least, because the force was amalgamated with the army air force into a new dedicated aerial force: the Fuerza Aérea Nacional in 1930. From this point onward the force was only allowed to operate helicopters and aircraft in transport and liaision supporting roles and as such was named Servicio de Aviación Naval.
After the Second World War the navy sent ten officers to the United States to become naval aviation pilots incorporating the knowledge that was assembled during the war. These were exciting times; the pilots flew fighter and torpedo-bombers and performed carrier operations as well. Eventually, the naval aviation was re-instated as a separate air arm in 1953, still only in support roles. To that end Bell 47 and Beech C-45 were be obtained and were delivered in 1954.
All this changed in 1978 when, in the midst of tensions with Argentina for the control of the Beagle Channel and Cape Horn islands, the Chilean Navy took delivery of aircraft and helicopters armed with guns and rockets and equipped for ASW, in the shape of Pilatus PC-7 armed turbo-prop training aircraft, twin engined P-111 (Embraer's C-110) armed patrol/exploration aircraft and SA319B Alouette armed helicopters. With those aircraft, the naval air branch took over the tactical maritime patrol/exploration and anti-submarine misions that were until then performed by the Air Force, becoming a tactical organization and being renamed Comando de Aviación Naval.
The current naval air arm is organised in two Air Arms (Fuerza Aeronaval No.1 at Viña del Mar and FA No.2 at Punta Arenas) and a dedicated ship borne unit; the Escuadrón Embarcadero. The force is equipped with patrol aircraft (P-3ACH Orion, EMB111AN and the new C295), liaison and transports (O-2A, C212 and EMB110), trainers (PC-7), and helicopters (Bell 206, Bell 412, Bo105, AS532, and HH-65 Dauphins). It also keeps various detachments along the long Chilean coastal line. The Bandeirantes are being replaced by the Persuader maritime patrol variant of the C295.
Source Aviación Naval (official)
Photo: Jaap Dijkstra