IT began with a band of daring surfies rescuing swimmers off Sydney's beaches.
Now the Westpac Life Saver Rescue Helicopter celebrates its 40th birthday as a full rescue service that has helped people caught in some of the nation's worst disasters.
Two helicopters flew in formation over Sydney Harbour on Sunday to mark the occasion, four decades after a group of surf lifesavers founded the service in 1973 with a MASH-style single-engine light helicopter, the Bell C47.
Then it was known as the Wales Bank SLSA Helicopter Surf Rescue Service.
Today it has a fleet of 15 helicopters across twelve bases around the country, and has helped rescue Australians involved in the Waterfall train crash, the Milperra bikie massacre and the Thredbo landslide, where the service helicopter was on hand to fly sole survivor Stuart Diver to Canberra Hospital after he was trapped in rubble for almost three days.
But the more things have changed, the more they've stayed the same, according to CEO Stephen Leahy.
"The reason we go out hasn't changed in those 40 years, we were set up to help the people of Sydney and NSW and we're still doing that today," he told AAP.
"The only things that have really changed are the helicopters themselves - what we use now are bigger, better and faster."
Even the bank that helped launch the fledgling service in 1973 with a $25,000 cheque remains the same, despite a name change.
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