Hobby Master HA33015 RCAF Northrop CF-116D Freedom Fighter - 116807, 419 Squadron, CFB Cold Lake, Canada, 1979 (1:72 Scale)
"Moosa aswayita (Cree for 'Beware the moose')"
- Motto of 419 Squadron
Originally designed by Northrop as a low-cost, low-maintenance fighter jet, the F-5 was intended for use by air forces that had limited resources and technical expertise. In 1964, the Royal Canadian Air Force, searching for a replacement for both the conventional attack fighter CF-104 and the nuclear strike interceptor CF-101, proposed entering into a joint production agreement with the United Kingdom to build over 100 F-4 Phantom II (which the Royal Navy was eager to acquire) but this was rejected as too costly. In February 1965, Chief of Operational Readiness and a future CDS, Lieutenant-General Jean Victor Allard, evaluated four possible replacements: Northrop F-5, Grumman A-6 Intruder, Douglas A-4 Skyhawk and LTV A-7 Corsair II.
While the Royal Canadian Navy wanted the A-4 Skyhawk, as a replacement for its carrier based McDonnell F2H Banshee, the only aircraft deemed "not suitable" was the F-5, and the A-7 Corsair was recommended. Nonetheless, Defense Minister Paul Hellyer "questioned the RCAF's preoccupation with fighters generally, and he rejected the need for and the utility of the nuclear strike role specifically" and changed the requirements, thus "guaranteeing that the CF-5 be selected as the new tactical fighter, and that the RCAF was to adopt an affordable aircraft capable of performing a conventional attack role," even though he later wrote in his biography that the F-5 was "little more than a trainer with guns hung on it." In Canada, which had a mature aerospace industry, selection of the less sophisticated F-5 was a disappointment and "clearly unpopular" among those in the RCAF. Selected to provide a tactical support role, based in Canada but to relocate to Europe, CF-5 squadrons were also committed to NATO's northern flank to act as a rapid-deployment force. However, the role for the CF-5 throughout its service with the RCAF was changed frequently and eventually the diminutive fighter would serve as an attack strike fighter, reconnaissance platform and trainer.
Pictured here is a 1:72 scale rendition of a Royal Canadian Air Force Northrop CF-116D Freedom fighter that was attached to the 419 Squadron, then deployed to CFB Cold Lake, Canada, during 1979.
Pre-order! Ship Date: June 2026.
Dimensions:
Wingspan: 7-3/4-inches
Length: 4-1/2-inches
Release Date: ?
Historical Account: "Beware the Moose" - 419 Squadron was re-formed on March 15th, 1955, as 419 All-Weather Fighter Squadron, and moved to the NATO Air Division base at Baden-Soellingen, Germany shortly thereafter. The squadron was equipped with the Avro CF-100 Canuck. 419 was disbanded December 31st, 1962.
The unit was re-formed at CFB Cold Lake on May 2nd, 1975, as 419 Tactical Fighter Training Squadron. It was disbanded in 1995 when the CF-5 aircraft were retired.
The squadron was re-formed again at 4 Wing Cold Lake on July 23rd, 2000, to conduct advanced lead-in fighter training for Canadian and NATO pilots using nine CT-155 Hawk aircraft.
419 Squadron was placed on hiatus on March 8th, 2024, as the RCAF transferred to an interim lead-in fighter training program with the Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training Program at Sheppard Air Force Base in Texas, and other fighter lead-in training programs in Finland and at Italy's International Flight Training School. This hiatus marked the end of RCAF operation of the CT-155 Hawk. The RCAF intends to reactivate 419 Squadron in the early 2030s with a new future fifth-generation trainer aircraft.