To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Technology and Maintenance Corps

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Technology and Maintenance Corps
חיל הטכנולוגיה והאחזקה
Technology and Maintenance Corps insignia
Active1948–present
Country Israel
Allegiance Israel Defense Forces
Commanders
Current
commander
Tat Aluf Ariel Shima
Insignia
Flag

The Israeli Technology and Maintenance Corps (Hebrew: חיל הטכנולוגיה והאחזקה, Heil HaTekhnologya VeHaAhzaka) is a combat-support corps in the IDF GOC Army Headquarters. Before the Israeli Technological and Logistics Directorate was dismantled, it fell under its jurisdiction. The corps is responsible for the development and maintenance of war materiel, combat-support materials, and other systems.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    885 338
    132 387
    135 357
  • Apps are dead... what's the next big thing?
  • Meet a Manufacturing Engineer
  • Computer Technician Career: Is It Right for You?

Transcription

History

In 1941, the Haganah's Ordnance Department (מחלקת החימוש‎, Mahleket Himush, abbr. Mahash) was founded. It engaged in the purchasing, concealment, and transport of materiel, in cooperation with Israel Military Industries, created in 1933. It was headed by Asher "Oshraka" Peled, who also served in the British army.[1] The Ordnance Department sold concealed weapons to the Yishuv, in accordance with the budget of each village. The British wrote that "There is a weapon to arm every combatant".[2] The first ordnance course took place in Ju'ara, the Haganah's central training camp in 1942. In 1943 another course was held in Ruhama.[3]

In January 1948, the Ordnance Department was renamed into the Ordnance Service (שירות החימוש‎). During the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the service's first "Basic Workshops" were established to help restore and improve vehicles. In 1951, the Engineering Corps was renamed into the Ordnance Corps.

During the Suez War, the corps rescued, collected and restored materiel. After the war, the first Ordnance Battalion was created. In the War of Attrition, the corps engaged in many rescue attempts. During the Yom Kippur War, the corps was able to restore and bring into service damaged war materiel. The pace of repair proved decisive. During the 1982 Lebanon War, the corps designated two regional ordnance units within Lebanon, and the Merkava tank, developed under the corps and manufactured by the IMI, was tested in battle for the first time.

Ordnance Corps logo (before 2015)

Following the Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000, new defenses were added to Armoured fighting vehicles. Several vehicles underwent upgrades, among these: upper turrets for the Nagmachon, Achzarit, and Centurion tank-chassis Puma CEV; mini-turrets for Merkava tanks; further defences to the IDF Caterpillar D9 (added cage armor); and the development of the "Scorpion," a Landing Bridge tank converted into a combat engineering tank able to carry a portable pillbox.

In 2016, the corps' name was changed from Ordnance Corps (חיל החימוש‎, Heil HaHimush) to Technology and Maintenance Corps.

Structure

The corps' training base (#20) is located in Tzrifin. Other units do not fall directly under the corps’ command, but are professionally affiliated with it:

  • The Center for Maintenance and Restoration is the main centre for holding war materiel, including the factory where the Merkava tank is manufactured.
  • The Center for Combat Spare Parts administers the supply of spare parts to the IDF in ten bases.
  • The Unit for Quality Assurance and Experiments conducts quality control and other experiments in two principal experiment bases and several other smaller, temporary bases.
  • The Central Regional Ordnance Supply Unit 650 (formerly 652) provides ordnance to the Central Command, including forces stationed in the West Bank.
  • The Northern Regional Ordnance Supply Unit 651 provides ordnance to the Northern Command.
  • The Southern Regional Ordnance Supply Unit 653 provides ordnance to the Southern Command.

Commanders

Below is a list of all Chief Ordnance Officers:[4]

Rank Name Years
Colonel Asher Peled 1948–1949
Lieutenant Colonel Zvi Ben-Ya'akov 1949–1950
Colonel Dov Shemer 1950–1951
Colonel Immanuel Prat 1951–1954
Colonel
later Maj. Gen.
Amos Horev 1954–1962
Colonel Inon Azruni 1963–1965
Brigadier General Haim Domi 1966–1973
Brigadier General Eliezer Barak 1973–1978
Brigadier General Ben Zion Ben Bashat 1978–1983
Brigadier General Toviah Margalit 1983–1985
Brigadier General Moshe Keidar 1985–1988
Brigadier General Zvi Oren 1988–1992
Brigadier General
later Maj. Gen.
Ami Sagis 1991–1995
Brigadier General Michael Dayan 1995–1998
Brigadier General Shalom Koren 1998–2000
Brigadier General Zekharia Hai 2000–2003
Brigadier General Haim Ronen 2003–2007
Brigadier General Eyal Alok 2007–2010
Brigadier General Tzvika Kraous 2010–2014
Brigadier General Eliezer Ben Harush 2014–2017
Brigadier General Mishel Yanko 2017–2019
Brigadier General Ilan Eliya 2019–2022
Brigadier General Ariel Shima 2022–present

References

  1. ^ Roy, Natan; Klein, Ze'ev (1982), "Technical Spirit in the Underground", pp. 49–50
  2. ^ Roy, Natan; Klein, Ze'ev (1982), "'Sliks' in the Settlements", p. 50
  3. ^ Roy, Natan; Klein, Ze'ev (1982), "Ordnance Instruction", pp. 50–51
  4. ^ "Ordnance Corps – Commanders" (in Hebrew). Israel Defense Forces. Retrieved 2010-05-14.

Bibliography

  • Roy, Natan; Klein, Ze'ev (1982). "Ordnance Corps". In Yehuda Schiff (ed.). IDF in its Corps: Army and Security Encyclopedia (in Hebrew). Vol. 13. Revivim Publishing.

External links

This page was last edited on 11 March 2024, at 21:39
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.