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Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Aerospace |
Founded | 1946 | (as Redifon)
Key people | Alex Dorrian (CEO) [1] |
Products | Full flight simulators |
Services | Commercial aviation training, military training |
Number of employees | ~2,000 |
Parent | Thales Group |
Thales Training & Simulation Ltd. is a multinational company which manufactures simulators, including full flight simulators and military simulators, and provides related training and support services. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Thales Group. [2]
The origins of the company date back to the incorporation of Redifon in the United Kingdom in 1946. [2] [3] In 1948, the company moved to the then new town of Crawley in West Sussex. In 1981, the parent company British Electric Traction changed the company name to Rediffusion Simulation Limited (RSL) to take advantage of the then familiar Rediffusion brand name.
In 1988, the company was bought by Hughes Aircraft and renamed Hughes Rediffusion Simulation (HRSL).
In 1994, the company was taken over by the French conglomerate Thomson-CSF, who renamed it Thomson Training & Simulation (TTSL) and merged it with Link-Miles, a simulation business based in Lancing that had been acquired by Thomson-CSF in 1990. All production activities were moved to the Manor Royal industrial estate in Crawley.
Further acquisitions by Thomson-CSF in the simulation business included the American company Burtek in 1979 and the Australian simulation business of Wormald Technology in 1998. In 2000, Thomson-CSF was rebranded Thales, and TTSL's name was changed accordingly to Thales Training & Simulation.
In 2012, Thales sold its civilian fixed-wing simulation business to L-3 Communications (now L3Harris), which incorporated it into a new company: L-3 Link Simulation & Training. [3] [4] The purchase included part of the TTSL Crawley plant – including the full flight simulator primary design and manufacturing facilities – but Thales retained its military and rotary-wing (helicopter) simulation business. [5] In 2023, L3Harris in turn sold on the business to TJC, which rebranded it Acron Aviation. [6]
Thales Training & Simulation has four main manufacturing plants:
In addition, the company has joint ventures and/or customer support hubs in the United States, Saudi Arabia, China, etc.[ citation needed ]
Thales have built and now operate numerous types of aircraft simulators, including: