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U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School

The U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School (USAF TPS) is the Air Force's advanced flight training school that trains experimental test pilots, flight test engineers, and flight test navigators to carry out tests and evaluations of new aerospace weapon systems[1] and also other aircraft of the U.S. Air Force. This school was established on 9 September 1944 as the Flight Test Training Unit at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (AFB) in Dayton, Ohio.[2] To take advantage of the uncongested skies, usually superb flying weather, and the lack of developed zones in the event of crashing, the test pilot school was officially moved to its present location at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert of Southern California on 4 February 1951.[2]

USAF Test Pilot School
Active9 September 1944-Present
CountryUnited States
BranchUnited States Air Force
TypeTest Pilot School
Size150
Part of412th Test Wing
Garrison/HQEdwards Air Force Base
Nickname(s)USAFTPS
Motto(s)Scientia est Virtus
Commanders
Current
commander
James Valpiani
Notable
commanders
Chuck Yeager
Buzz Aldrin
Insignia
U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School Graduate Patch

The TPS was created to formalize and standardize test pilot training, reduce the high accident rate during the 1940s, and increase the number of productive test flights.[3] In response to the increasing complexity of aircraft and their electronic systems, the school added training programs for flight test engineers and flight test navigators.[4] Between 1962 and 1972, the test pilot school included astronaut training for armed forces test pilots, but these classes were dropped when the U.S. Air Force crewed spaceflight program was suspended.[5] Class sizes have been uniformly quite small, with recent classes having about twenty students.[6] The school is a component of the 412th Test Wing of the Air Force Materiel Command.[7]

Mission edit

The USAF TPS aims to produce highly adaptive, critical-thinking flight test professionals to lead and conduct full-spectrum tests and evaluations of aerospace weapons, and to be the world's premier educational and training center for theoretical and applied flight test engineering.[1]

Selection process edit

  • Admission into the USAF TPS is extremely competitive. Thousands of pilots apply. Not uncommonly, Some students have been alternated two or three times before being accepted.[8]
  • Civilians are also permitted and encouraged to apply for the long-course program.[6]
  • Prospective students should provide AF Form 1711, USAF Test Pilot School Application, plus additional forms specific to a) USAF Pilot/Navigator, b) Experimental FTE, and c) Civilian applicant for the selection board.[9]
  • Experimental FTE and civilian applicants are required to undergo a flying Class III physical before facing the TPS selection board.[10]
  • Applications must be received by Special Flying Programs Section HQ AFPC/DPAOT3 no later than 45 days before the selection boards meet. UCCR selection boards are held once a year at the Headquarters of the Air Force Personnel Center. The boards are normally held in November, and the board selects the TPS two classes for the next year. At this point,t AFIT-TPS students and students from foreign TPS schools are also selected. The USAF TPS commandant chairs the board. Board members consist of an HQ AFPC colonel, and at least a majority of the board members must be TPS graduates (majors or lieutenant colonels) who are standing flight test, squadron commanders. The AFMC/DO selects board members.[10]

Admission requirements edit

All candidates require secret clearance.[11] As of May 2015, the minimum admission requirements for application to the USAF TPS are:[11][12]

Course Time in Service (at time of entry) Education Experience Physical qualification
Experimental test pilot Less than 9 years and 6 months (helicopter: 10 years and 3 months) Bachelor of Science (BS) in engineering, math, or physics (GPA > 3.0) 12 months Aircraft Commander (AC) in a major weapon system (MWS)
750 hours or instructor pilot (IP) in an MWS (1,000 hours if dual IP)
Note: 250 hours of manned non-MWS time may be included
Annual flying class II
Experimental test RPA pilot Less than 9 years and 6 months IP in RPA MWS or at least 750 hours
Note: 250 hours in a manned MWS may be included
Experimental combat systems officer (CSO including navigator, WSO) Less than 9 years and 6 months IP in CSO MWS or at least 500 hours in MWS, excludes student time
Experimental flight test engineer Less than 8 years BS in engineering, math, or physics (GPA > 3.0)
A technical M.S. degree highly desired
≥ 2 years experience in 13XX, 14NX, 15AX, 17XX 21AX, 21CX, 21LX, 21MX, 33SX, 61X, 62EX, 63AX Annual flying class III
  • Grade point average is on a 4.0 scale.[13]
  • Air Force standards for flying duty are defined in Air Force Instruction 48-123, Chapter 6.[14]
  • Air Force Specialty Codes listed for engineers include:[15]
    • 13XX—Operations: Space, Missile, Command, and Control
    • 14NX—Operations: Intelligence
    • 21AX—Logistics: Aircraft Maintenance
    • 21CX—Logistics: (not found)
    • 21LX—Logistics: Logistician
    • 21MX—Logistics: Munitions and Missile Maintenance
    • 33SX—Support: Communications and Information
    • 61SX—Acquisition: Scientist
    • 62EX—Acquisition: Developmental Engineer
    • 63AX—Acquisition: Acquisition Manager

Exchange program edit

From time to time, students are selected to attend different test pilot schools in an exchange program between test cultures. Toward this end, students can be sent to the Naval Test Pilot School at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, and vice versa. Also, the USAF Test Pilot School has an exchange program with the Empire Test Pilots' School at Boscombe Down, England, and the EPNER (École du Personnel Navigant d'Essais et de Réception), the French Test Pilot's School.[16]

Course of study edit

  • The USAF TPS curriculum is designed to grant a Master of Science degree in flight test engineering through the Air Force's Air University at the end of the 48-week course. Students are required to take all of the 20 offered courses to graduate. This is a total of 50 credit hours for the 48-week course. Each of the four phases are broken down into three or four main lecture courses, plus their associated flight laboratory work or flight simulator work, and actual practice flights. To graduate from the USAF TPS, a student must be in good standing and satisfactorily complete all academic tests, all oral and written reports, all of the required flight missions, and comprehensive pre-graduation written and oral evaluations with an overall GPA of 3.0 or better.[17]
  • Accreditation from the American Council of Education has been in effect since July 1974 (last updated in July 1998) to recommend selected coursework for transfer credit to other higher education institutions.[18]
  • At graduation, the commandant usually presents these awards:[19]
    • Liethen-Tittle Award to the experimental test pilot graduate with the best overall record for outstanding performance and academic excellence
    • R.L. Jones Award to the outstanding experimental test navigator or experimental flight test engineer graduate with the best overall record for outstanding performance and academic excellence

Curriculum edit

  • Two classes are held each year, 48 weeks each (long class). Students can apply for one of three tracks - experimental test pilot, flight test engineer, or flight test navigator. The upper class is called the senior class, while the lower class is called the juniors, determined by what point they are at in their studies at TPS. The class size at TPS varies. Over the past few years, over 20 TPS students have been in each class.[6]
  • The four main subdisciplines taught by the USAF TPS Education Division are [20]
    • Performance
    • Flying qualities
    • Systems
    • Test management
  • TPS also offers short courses in these areas:[21]
    • Aerospace vehicle test course
    • Unmanned aerial vehicle flight test engineering
    • Electronic warfare flight test engineering
    • Test management
    • Equations of motion
    • Propulsion
    • Senior executive course
  • Organization of the class uses this chain of command:[22]
    • Commandant—TPS commander
    • Deputy commandant—TPS deputy commander
    • Class leader— assigned by the front office based on seniority and academic curriculum to assist the student population
    • Students
  • Facilities include [23]

History edit

Early years edit

 
Packard-LePere Lusac 11 Biplane over McCook Field

Although the United States Armed Forces had been evaluating aircraft since Lt. Benny Foulois flew with Orville Wright in 1909, the designation of "test pilot" was not formally applied until a group of McCook Field pilots was assigned to a flight testing squadron at Wright Field during World War I.[24] Test pilot selection was a seemingly indiscriminate process yielding a mix of experienced pilots who had volunteered for the task, flight instructors who were simply assigned to the job, and the occasional officer fresh from flying school. One of the latter, Lt. Donald Putt, who would later rise to the rank of lieutenant general, recalled:

...out of the blue, I got orders to report to Dayton...I had not shown any interest in wanting to be a test pilot.[25]

Test pilot training was nearly as informal as the selection process with most material directed toward the aeronautical engineers who supervised the tests. Reports and texts of this time provided little guidance regarding how tests should be flown.[26] The best training for test pilots came from practical experience gained while flying as observers and hangar-talk tutorials from other pilots.[27] A test pilot was not expected to have a formal engineering background. He was simply to follow the instructions on the test card and fly the airplane appropriately.[2] Setting the standard to overcome this condition were test pilots such as Jimmy Doolittle. While at McCook Field, Doolittle served as a test pilot, but was given leave to earn both Master of Science and doctoral degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[28] Today, most test pilots have advanced degrees in engineering.[29]

At Wright-Patterson AFB edit

 
Map of Wright Field in 1954

Inspired by the RAF's Empire Test Pilots' School, Colonel Ernest K. Warburton, chief of the Flight Test Section at Wright Field, set about changing the role and status of flight testing in the Army Air Forces. His goals for the flight test community were standardization and independence, which were later realized with the establishment of the Air Technical Command Flight Test Training unit on 9 September 1944[2] and the independent Flight Test Division in 1945. The AAF now had a formal program of study to train young pilots to become flight test professionals.[30] Under the command of Major Ralph C. Hoewing, the Flight Test Training Unit's curriculum included classroom sessions covering performance flight test theory and piloting techniques. The students then put theory into practice with performance evaluations on the AT-6 Texan trainer. Shortly after the first class graduated, the school was redesignated the Flight Section School Branch with an increased focus on academic theory. In 1945, the school moved to Vandalia Municipal Airport (now the Dayton International Airport), after which it was redesignated the Flight Performance School and placed under the command of Lt. Colonel John R. Muehlberg, who became the first to carry the title "commandant". Under Muehlberg, who in 1944/45 had attended the second course at the newly established ETPS in England,[31] the school increased its fleet with North American P-51 Mustangs, Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, and North American B-25 Mitchells and expanded the curriculum to include a separate four-month stability and control course in addition to the existing performance course.[32] In 1946, the test pilot school was moved again to nearby Patterson Field and Colonel Albert Boyd was assigned as chief of the Flight Test Division. Col. Boyd profoundly influenced both the school and the character of its future AAF test pilots with his insistence on precision flying skills and discipline.[33] A graduate of the school in 1946, Major Bob Cardenas, later summarized Col. Boyd's influence:

The old-fashioned version of the test pilot wrapped up in its hazy aura of glamorous high adventure is gone. No more do they judge a test pilot's flying skill by his ability to tear the wings of the aircraft in a screaming terminal velocity dive. This has been replaced by flying abilities capable of holding very close tolerances to airspeed, altitude, and rate of climb while engaged in reading data, adjusting power, and writing down observations. It is an exact science requiring precision flying of the highest caliber.[33]

Heading west edit

 
Test Pilot School Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star

Frequent bad weather and increased air traffic congestion at Wright-Patterson often prevented students from completing their coursework on time.[34] In addition, most USAAF airplanes were by then being manufactured and tested by contractors on the West Coast of the United States. For these and other reasons, Col. Boyd began the transfer of all flight test operations, including the test pilot school, to Muroc Army Air Field. next to Rogers Dry Lake in the desert of southern California.[2] The school continued operations at Patterson Field, and 1947, had the first United States Air Force class[35] and the first class to fly jets.[36] The Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star would provide jet performance training at the school until 1954.[33]

 
Member of the USAF Test Pilots School class 49C: From Left to right: Joseph John "Tym" Tymczyszyn, 1st Lt. Thomas Blazing, 1st Lt. Richard Dennen, Capt. Harold Killian (circa 1949)

In 1949, this school was renamed the Air Material Command Experimental Test Pilot School, and the soon-to-be Brigadier General Boyd assumed command of Muroc Air Force Base. Boyd chose Major John Amman, an instructor at the school, to go to Muroc AFB, and implement the details of the school's move westward.[37] On 8 December 1949, Muroc AFB has renamed the Edwards Air Force Base in honor of Glen Edwards, TPS class 45, who was killed in the crash of the Northrop YB-49 Flying Wing bomber.[38] Captain Edwards, who had recently earned a Master of Science degree in aeronautical engineering from Princeton, typified the new breed of test pilot of which Cardenas had written — one who combined the talents of a highly skilled pilot with the technical expertise of an engineer.[39] Amman completed his work and on 4 February 1951, the school was officially transferred to Edwards Air Force Base. The enormous dry lake bed, extremely long runways, and clear weather served the USAF and the school well, as aircraft performance continued to increase.[29]

Edwards Air Force Base edit

 
Unofficial "Howland Owl" TPS logo from the early days at EAFB.[40]

The TPS was housed in an old weather-beaten wooden hangar along the flight line of what became known as South Base.[2] Although the quarters were spartan, the weather was superb with only two flying days lost due to weather in the first seven months of operation.[37] Taking advantage of the calm morning air, students started the day flying missions to collect test data. Afternoons were spent in the lecture hall, and evenings were devoted to reducing data from the day's flights.[37] Data reduction was dull and labor-intensive, requiring the student to transcribe information recorded on film or oscillograph paper and perform calculations by hand or slide rule. Once reduced, the data were woven into a report that summarized the test and the student's conclusions.[41] Some students were not prepared for the rigorous academics and had to be dropped from enrollment. This situation improved in 1953, when the school was moved out of Air Research and Development Command, which allowed the selection boards to draw from a much larger, USAF-wide, pool of applicants, rather than just the local test squadrons.[41]

Although changes to the curriculum could be made quickly, the acquisition of aircraft for the school remained a perennial challenge for the school's staff.[2] The Lockheed T-33 Shooting Star arrived in 1953 and became a staple for the students over the next 23 years.[41] More aircraft types were added during the 1950s, including the Republic F-84 Thunderjet, North American F-86 Sabre, North American F-100 Super Sabre, Martin B-57 Canberra, and Convair F-102 Delta Dagger — the school's first delta-winged airplane.[42] In 1955, the school was renamed the U.S. Air Force Flight Test Pilot School, and a year later, moved into its present location on the Main Base facility.[2] This new building, built at a cost of $156,000, was the first and only structure designed specifically for the purposes of the school.[43]

 
TPS Building, Edwards AFB

In 1956, the school chose an official emblem, featuring a slide rule in front of the silhouette of a climbing jet, and a motto, Scientia est Virtus — Latin for "Knowledge is Power". The new logo emphasized the school's role in preparing students with both the technical theory and flying skills indispensable for evaluating modern aircraft.[43] The new logo also replaced the unofficial badge of Dr. Howland Owl, a character from the popular Pogo comic strip, that appeared on the noses of many of the school's airplanes.

As the Air Force gradually developed an aerospace doctrine during this period, a small cadre began to establish the criteria for additional coursework aimed at qualifying TPS graduates for the tasks of an astronaut. On Oct. 12, 1961, the Test Pilot School has redesignated the U.S. Air Force Aerospace Research Pilot School (ARPS), with the curriculum, expanded to a full year, divided into Phase I (Experimental Test Pilot Course) and Phase II (Aerospace Research Pilot Course).[44]

Between 1962 and 1975, the test pilot school expanded its role to include astronaut training for armed forces test pilots. Thirty-seven TPS graduates were selected for the U.S. space program, and 26 earned astronaut's wings by flying in the X-15, Gemini, Apollo, and Space Shuttle programs.[45]

On 21 May 2009, a T-38 Talon from the test pilot school on a training flight crashed 12 miles north of Edwards AFB, killing the student pilot Major Mark Paul Graziano and severely injuring the student navigator Major Lee Vincent Jones. An accident investigation determined that the crash was caused when the aircraft's rudder operating mechanism disconnected the flight controls from the rudder actuators and caused the rudder to deflect 30° to the left. This induced an uncontrollable yaw and a resulting roll, causing the aircraft to depart a controlled flight, a condition that is unrecoverable in the T-38. The report stated that contributing factors to the crash were a structural fatigue failure or a structural break in a critical component or bolt, and a maintenance error in which a nut or cotter pin did not properly secure a bolt connecting two critical components. Citing two historical cases of rudder failure, the report concluded that maintenance error was the more likely cause. The investigation concluded, "insufficient supervisory oversight and a lack of discipline of the training process" in the maintenance unit existed in relation to the mishap aircraft.[46]

Personnel edit

Commandants edit

The commanding officer of the USAF test pilot school is better known by the title of the commandant. Although not an official prerequisite for the position, most commandants are themselves graduates of the test pilot school. As of September 2023, Colonel James Valpiani is the commandant of the school.[47]

Notable alumni edit

TPS has produced many notable alumni, including astronauts, record-setting aviators, and senior Air Force leaders.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 9.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h . United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2008-08-10.
  3. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond. p. 33.
  4. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 10.
  5. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond. p. 50.
  6. ^ a b c USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog. p. 17.
  7. ^ . United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 2015-09-27. Retrieved 2008-08-29.
  8. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 17.
  9. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 19.
  10. ^ a b USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 20.
  11. ^ a b U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School, Instruction 99-107, "Certified Current 4 May 2015"
  12. ^ U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School, Information (PDF capture of the web page as at 2013-10-08)
  13. ^ Air Force Instruction 99-107. p. 4.
  14. ^ AFI 48-123
  15. ^ AFOCD, Quick Reference Guide, p. 273
  16. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 18.
  17. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 21.
  18. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 37.
  19. ^ Air Force Instruction 99-107. p. 15.
  20. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 24.
  21. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 35-36.
  22. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 14.
  23. ^ USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog, p. 11.
  24. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 11.
  25. ^ USAF TPS History 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. Edwards AFB website. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  26. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 14.
  27. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 15.
  28. ^ Wright from the Start, Ch 4, retrieved June 20, 2008.
  29. ^ a b Lopez, Fighter Pilot's Heaven, p.128.
  30. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 28.
  31. ^ "The Empire Test Pilots' School - Twenty-Five Years". ETPS Brochure (4th Ed.). HMSO for The Empire Test Pilots' School: 41. 1968.
  32. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 36.
  33. ^ a b c USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 38.
  34. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 40.
  35. ^ The USAF was formed as a separate branch of the armed forces on 18 September 1947.
  36. ^ Lopez, Fighter Pilot's Heaven, p.129.
  37. ^ a b c USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 41.
  38. ^ Historic California Posts, California State Military Museum, retrieved June 21, 2008.
  39. ^ Glenn Edwards Bio 2008-07-10 at the Wayback Machine, Air Force Link, retrieved June 29, 2008.
  40. ^ Carey, Howling Howland, p.11.
  41. ^ a b c USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 42.
  42. ^ USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 43.
  43. ^ a b USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond, p. 45.
  44. ^ "U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School History". Edwards Air Force Base. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  45. ^ Young, Forging Aerospace Power for America, pgs. 3–4.
  46. ^ Military Times, "Poor maintenance likely led to fatal T-38 crash", October 15, 2009.
  47. ^ Cloys, Robert (2023-09-05). "ETFC: Developing future test & evaluation leaders". United States Air Force. from the original on 2024-01-07. Retrieved 2024-01-07. During the ceremony, Col. James Valpiani, United States Test Pilot School commandant, addressed the class.

References edit

  • "Air Force Officer Classification Directory (AFOCD)" (PDF). HQ AFPC/DPPAC. 2007-07-31. Retrieved 2008-07-20. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • (PDF). USAF TPS Curriculum Standards Division. 2007-06-22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2008-07-19. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • "Air Force Instruction 48-123, Vol. 3" (PDF). Secretary of the Air Force. 2006-06-05. Retrieved 2010-09-29. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • "Air Force Instruction 99-107, Test Pilot School" (PDF). Secretary of the Air Force. 2002-09-23. Retrieved 2008-07-19. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond. Privately Published. 1994.
  • Carey, Christopher T. (2007). "'Howling Howland': A history of NASA F-104B Starfighter N819NA" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-09-29. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Eppley, Charles V. (March 1963). (PDF). USAF. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 25, 2010. Retrieved 2008-10-11. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Kutyna, Donald J. (November–December 1969). "The Aerospace Research Pilot School". Air University Review. XXI (1). United States Air Force: 81–91. Retrieved 2008-08-29.
  • Lopez, Donald S. (1995). Fighter Pilot's Heaven: Flight Testing the Early Jets. Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 1-56098-457-0. Retrieved 2008-06-21.
  • Marrett, George J. (2008). Contrails Over the Mojave: The Golden Age of Jet Flight Testing at Edwards Air Force Base. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-511-0. Retrieved 2008-08-09.
  • Young, James O. (1997). Meeting the Challenge of Supersonic Flight. Air Force Flight Test Center History Office. ASIN B0006QV0BQ. Retrieved 2008-06-22.
  • Young, James O. (2007). (PDF). The U.S. Air Force Flight Test Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-12. Retrieved 2008-07-03. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

References edit

This article contains information that came from a public domain government website

External links edit

  • "U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School". United States Air Force. Retrieved September 4, 2022.
  • . May 19, 2008. Archived from the original on August 27, 2009. Retrieved February 18, 2015.
  • USAF TPS 08A
  • USAF TPS 08B

34°55′02″N 117°54′00″W / 34.9171°N 117.9000°W / 34.9171; -117.9000

force, test, pilot, school, usaf, force, advanced, flight, training, school, that, trains, experimental, test, pilots, flight, test, engineers, flight, test, navigators, carry, tests, evaluations, aerospace, weapon, systems, also, other, aircraft, force, this,. The U S Air Force Test Pilot School USAF TPS is the Air Force s advanced flight training school that trains experimental test pilots flight test engineers and flight test navigators to carry out tests and evaluations of new aerospace weapon systems 1 and also other aircraft of the U S Air Force This school was established on 9 September 1944 as the Flight Test Training Unit at Wright Patterson Air Force Base AFB in Dayton Ohio 2 To take advantage of the uncongested skies usually superb flying weather and the lack of developed zones in the event of crashing the test pilot school was officially moved to its present location at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert of Southern California on 4 February 1951 2 USAF Test Pilot SchoolActive9 September 1944 PresentCountryUnited StatesBranchUnited States Air ForceTypeTest Pilot SchoolSize150Part of412th Test WingGarrison HQEdwards Air Force BaseNickname s USAFTPSMotto s Scientia est VirtusCommandersCurrentcommanderJames ValpianiNotablecommandersChuck Yeager Buzz AldrinInsigniaU S Air Force Test Pilot School Graduate Patch The TPS was created to formalize and standardize test pilot training reduce the high accident rate during the 1940s and increase the number of productive test flights 3 In response to the increasing complexity of aircraft and their electronic systems the school added training programs for flight test engineers and flight test navigators 4 Between 1962 and 1972 the test pilot school included astronaut training for armed forces test pilots but these classes were dropped when the U S Air Force crewed spaceflight program was suspended 5 Class sizes have been uniformly quite small with recent classes having about twenty students 6 The school is a component of the 412th Test Wing of the Air Force Materiel Command 7 Contents 1 Mission 2 Selection process 2 1 Admission requirements 2 2 Exchange program 2 3 Course of study 3 Curriculum 4 History 4 1 Early years 4 2 At Wright Patterson AFB 4 3 Heading west 4 4 Edwards Air Force Base 5 Personnel 5 1 Commandants 5 2 Notable alumni 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 References 10 External linksMission editThe USAF TPS aims to produce highly adaptive critical thinking flight test professionals to lead and conduct full spectrum tests and evaluations of aerospace weapons and to be the world s premier educational and training center for theoretical and applied flight test engineering 1 Selection process editAdmission into the USAF TPS is extremely competitive Thousands of pilots apply Not uncommonly Some students have been alternated two or three times before being accepted 8 Civilians are also permitted and encouraged to apply for the long course program 6 Prospective students should provide AF Form 1711 USAF Test Pilot School Application plus additional forms specific to a USAF Pilot Navigator b Experimental FTE and c Civilian applicant for the selection board 9 Experimental FTE and civilian applicants are required to undergo a flying Class III physical before facing the TPS selection board 10 Applications must be received by Special Flying Programs Section HQ AFPC DPAOT3 no later than 45 days before the selection boards meet UCCR selection boards are held once a year at the Headquarters of the Air Force Personnel Center The boards are normally held in November and the board selects the TPS two classes for the next year At this point t AFIT TPS students and students from foreign TPS schools are also selected The USAF TPS commandant chairs the board Board members consist of an HQ AFPC colonel and at least a majority of the board members must be TPS graduates majors or lieutenant colonels who are standing flight test squadron commanders The AFMC DO selects board members 10 Admission requirements edit All candidates require secret clearance 11 As of May 2015 the minimum admission requirements for application to the USAF TPS are 11 12 Course Time in Service at time of entry Education Experience Physical qualificationExperimental test pilot Less than 9 years and 6 months helicopter 10 years and 3 months Bachelor of Science BS in engineering math or physics GPA gt 3 0 12 months Aircraft Commander AC in a major weapon system MWS 750 hours or instructor pilot IP in an MWS 1 000 hours if dual IP Note 250 hours of manned non MWS time may be included Annual flying class IIExperimental test RPA pilot Less than 9 years and 6 months IP in RPA MWS or at least 750 hours Note 250 hours in a manned MWS may be includedExperimental combat systems officer CSO including navigator WSO Less than 9 years and 6 months IP in CSO MWS or at least 500 hours in MWS excludes student timeExperimental flight test engineer Less than 8 years BS in engineering math or physics GPA gt 3 0 A technical M S degree highly desired 2 years experience in 13XX 14NX 15AX 17XX 21AX 21CX 21LX 21MX 33SX 61X 62EX 63AX Annual flying class IIIGrade point average is on a 4 0 scale 13 Air Force standards for flying duty are defined in Air Force Instruction 48 123 Chapter 6 14 Air Force Specialty Codes listed for engineers include 15 13XX Operations Space Missile Command and Control 14NX Operations Intelligence 21AX Logistics Aircraft Maintenance 21CX Logistics not found 21LX Logistics Logistician 21MX Logistics Munitions and Missile Maintenance 33SX Support Communications and Information 61SX Acquisition Scientist 62EX Acquisition Developmental Engineer 63AX Acquisition Acquisition ManagerExchange program edit From time to time students are selected to attend different test pilot schools in an exchange program between test cultures Toward this end students can be sent to the Naval Test Pilot School at Naval Air Station Patuxent River Maryland and vice versa Also the USAF Test Pilot School has an exchange program with the Empire Test Pilots School at Boscombe Down England and the EPNER Ecole du Personnel Navigant d Essais et de Reception the French Test Pilot s School 16 Course of study edit The USAF TPS curriculum is designed to grant a Master of Science degree in flight test engineering through the Air Force s Air University at the end of the 48 week course Students are required to take all of the 20 offered courses to graduate This is a total of 50 credit hours for the 48 week course Each of the four phases are broken down into three or four main lecture courses plus their associated flight laboratory work or flight simulator work and actual practice flights To graduate from the USAF TPS a student must be in good standing and satisfactorily complete all academic tests all oral and written reports all of the required flight missions and comprehensive pre graduation written and oral evaluations with an overall GPA of 3 0 or better 17 Accreditation from the American Council of Education has been in effect since July 1974 last updated in July 1998 to recommend selected coursework for transfer credit to other higher education institutions 18 At graduation the commandant usually presents these awards 19 Liethen Tittle Award to the experimental test pilot graduate with the best overall record for outstanding performance and academic excellence R L Jones Award to the outstanding experimental test navigator or experimental flight test engineer graduate with the best overall record for outstanding performance and academic excellenceCurriculum editTwo classes are held each year 48 weeks each long class Students can apply for one of three tracks experimental test pilot flight test engineer or flight test navigator The upper class is called the senior class while the lower class is called the juniors determined by what point they are at in their studies at TPS The class size at TPS varies Over the past few years over 20 TPS students have been in each class 6 The four main subdisciplines taught by the USAF TPS Education Division are 20 Performance Flying qualities Systems Test management TPS also offers short courses in these areas 21 Aerospace vehicle test course Unmanned aerial vehicle flight test engineering Electronic warfare flight test engineering Test management Equations of motion Propulsion Senior executive course Organization of the class uses this chain of command 22 Commandant TPS commander Deputy commandant TPS deputy commander Class leader assigned by the front office based on seniority and academic curriculum to assist the student population Students Facilities include 23 Two fully functional control rooms RADAR and electro optics labs Variable stability in flight simulator test aircraft or F 16 VISTA Student library About 100 airborne laboratories over the course of the academic year from Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15 to Northrop Grumman B 2 SpiritHistory editEarly years edit nbsp Packard LePere Lusac 11 Biplane over McCook FieldAlthough the United States Armed Forces had been evaluating aircraft since Lt Benny Foulois flew with Orville Wright in 1909 the designation of test pilot was not formally applied until a group of McCook Field pilots was assigned to a flight testing squadron at Wright Field during World War I 24 Test pilot selection was a seemingly indiscriminate process yielding a mix of experienced pilots who had volunteered for the task flight instructors who were simply assigned to the job and the occasional officer fresh from flying school One of the latter Lt Donald Putt who would later rise to the rank of lieutenant general recalled out of the blue I got orders to report to Dayton I had not shown any interest in wanting to be a test pilot 25 Test pilot training was nearly as informal as the selection process with most material directed toward the aeronautical engineers who supervised the tests Reports and texts of this time provided little guidance regarding how tests should be flown 26 The best training for test pilots came from practical experience gained while flying as observers and hangar talk tutorials from other pilots 27 A test pilot was not expected to have a formal engineering background He was simply to follow the instructions on the test card and fly the airplane appropriately 2 Setting the standard to overcome this condition were test pilots such as Jimmy Doolittle While at McCook Field Doolittle served as a test pilot but was given leave to earn both Master of Science and doctoral degrees from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 28 Today most test pilots have advanced degrees in engineering 29 At Wright Patterson AFB edit nbsp Map of Wright Field in 1954Inspired by the RAF s Empire Test Pilots School Colonel Ernest K Warburton chief of the Flight Test Section at Wright Field set about changing the role and status of flight testing in the Army Air Forces His goals for the flight test community were standardization and independence which were later realized with the establishment of the Air Technical Command Flight Test Training unit on 9 September 1944 2 and the independent Flight Test Division in 1945 The AAF now had a formal program of study to train young pilots to become flight test professionals 30 Under the command of Major Ralph C Hoewing the Flight Test Training Unit s curriculum included classroom sessions covering performance flight test theory and piloting techniques The students then put theory into practice with performance evaluations on the AT 6 Texan trainer Shortly after the first class graduated the school was redesignated the Flight Section School Branch with an increased focus on academic theory In 1945 the school moved to Vandalia Municipal Airport now the Dayton International Airport after which it was redesignated the Flight Performance School and placed under the command of Lt Colonel John R Muehlberg who became the first to carry the title commandant Under Muehlberg who in 1944 45 had attended the second course at the newly established ETPS in England 31 the school increased its fleet with North American P 51 Mustangs Boeing B 17 Flying Fortress and North American B 25 Mitchells and expanded the curriculum to include a separate four month stability and control course in addition to the existing performance course 32 In 1946 the test pilot school was moved again to nearby Patterson Field and Colonel Albert Boyd was assigned as chief of the Flight Test Division Col Boyd profoundly influenced both the school and the character of its future AAF test pilots with his insistence on precision flying skills and discipline 33 A graduate of the school in 1946 Major Bob Cardenas later summarized Col Boyd s influence The old fashioned version of the test pilot wrapped up in its hazy aura of glamorous high adventure is gone No more do they judge a test pilot s flying skill by his ability to tear the wings of the aircraft in a screaming terminal velocity dive This has been replaced by flying abilities capable of holding very close tolerances to airspeed altitude and rate of climb while engaged in reading data adjusting power and writing down observations It is an exact science requiring precision flying of the highest caliber 33 Heading west edit nbsp Test Pilot School Lockheed P 80 Shooting StarFrequent bad weather and increased air traffic congestion at Wright Patterson often prevented students from completing their coursework on time 34 In addition most USAAF airplanes were by then being manufactured and tested by contractors on the West Coast of the United States For these and other reasons Col Boyd began the transfer of all flight test operations including the test pilot school to Muroc Army Air Field next to Rogers Dry Lake in the desert of southern California 2 The school continued operations at Patterson Field and 1947 had the first United States Air Force class 35 and the first class to fly jets 36 The Lockheed P 80 Shooting Star would provide jet performance training at the school until 1954 33 nbsp Member of the USAF Test Pilots School class 49C From Left to right Joseph John Tym Tymczyszyn 1st Lt Thomas Blazing 1st Lt Richard Dennen Capt Harold Killian circa 1949 In 1949 this school was renamed the Air Material Command Experimental Test Pilot School and the soon to be Brigadier General Boyd assumed command of Muroc Air Force Base Boyd chose Major John Amman an instructor at the school to go to Muroc AFB and implement the details of the school s move westward 37 On 8 December 1949 Muroc AFB has renamed the Edwards Air Force Base in honor of Glen Edwards TPS class 45 who was killed in the crash of the Northrop YB 49 Flying Wing bomber 38 Captain Edwards who had recently earned a Master of Science degree in aeronautical engineering from Princeton typified the new breed of test pilot of which Cardenas had written one who combined the talents of a highly skilled pilot with the technical expertise of an engineer 39 Amman completed his work and on 4 February 1951 the school was officially transferred to Edwards Air Force Base The enormous dry lake bed extremely long runways and clear weather served the USAF and the school well as aircraft performance continued to increase 29 Edwards Air Force Base edit nbsp Unofficial Howland Owl TPS logo from the early days at EAFB 40 The TPS was housed in an old weather beaten wooden hangar along the flight line of what became known as South Base 2 Although the quarters were spartan the weather was superb with only two flying days lost due to weather in the first seven months of operation 37 Taking advantage of the calm morning air students started the day flying missions to collect test data Afternoons were spent in the lecture hall and evenings were devoted to reducing data from the day s flights 37 Data reduction was dull and labor intensive requiring the student to transcribe information recorded on film or oscillograph paper and perform calculations by hand or slide rule Once reduced the data were woven into a report that summarized the test and the student s conclusions 41 Some students were not prepared for the rigorous academics and had to be dropped from enrollment This situation improved in 1953 when the school was moved out of Air Research and Development Command which allowed the selection boards to draw from a much larger USAF wide pool of applicants rather than just the local test squadrons 41 Although changes to the curriculum could be made quickly the acquisition of aircraft for the school remained a perennial challenge for the school s staff 2 The Lockheed T 33 Shooting Star arrived in 1953 and became a staple for the students over the next 23 years 41 More aircraft types were added during the 1950s including the Republic F 84 Thunderjet North American F 86 Sabre North American F 100 Super Sabre Martin B 57 Canberra and Convair F 102 Delta Dagger the school s first delta winged airplane 42 In 1955 the school was renamed the U S Air Force Flight Test Pilot School and a year later moved into its present location on the Main Base facility 2 This new building built at a cost of 156 000 was the first and only structure designed specifically for the purposes of the school 43 nbsp TPS Building Edwards AFBIn 1956 the school chose an official emblem featuring a slide rule in front of the silhouette of a climbing jet and a motto Scientia est Virtus Latin for Knowledge is Power The new logo emphasized the school s role in preparing students with both the technical theory and flying skills indispensable for evaluating modern aircraft 43 The new logo also replaced the unofficial badge of Dr Howland Owl a character from the popular Pogo comic strip that appeared on the noses of many of the school s airplanes As the Air Force gradually developed an aerospace doctrine during this period a small cadre began to establish the criteria for additional coursework aimed at qualifying TPS graduates for the tasks of an astronaut On Oct 12 1961 the Test Pilot School has redesignated the U S Air Force Aerospace Research Pilot School ARPS with the curriculum expanded to a full year divided into Phase I Experimental Test Pilot Course and Phase II Aerospace Research Pilot Course 44 Between 1962 and 1975 the test pilot school expanded its role to include astronaut training for armed forces test pilots Thirty seven TPS graduates were selected for the U S space program and 26 earned astronaut s wings by flying in the X 15 Gemini Apollo and Space Shuttle programs 45 On 21 May 2009 a T 38 Talon from the test pilot school on a training flight crashed 12 miles north of Edwards AFB killing the student pilot Major Mark Paul Graziano and severely injuring the student navigator Major Lee Vincent Jones An accident investigation determined that the crash was caused when the aircraft s rudder operating mechanism disconnected the flight controls from the rudder actuators and caused the rudder to deflect 30 to the left This induced an uncontrollable yaw and a resulting roll causing the aircraft to depart a controlled flight a condition that is unrecoverable in the T 38 The report stated that contributing factors to the crash were a structural fatigue failure or a structural break in a critical component or bolt and a maintenance error in which a nut or cotter pin did not properly secure a bolt connecting two critical components Citing two historical cases of rudder failure the report concluded that maintenance error was the more likely cause The investigation concluded insufficient supervisory oversight and a lack of discipline of the training process in the maintenance unit existed in relation to the mishap aircraft 46 Personnel editCommandants edit Main article Commandants of the USAF Test Pilot School The commanding officer of the USAF test pilot school is better known by the title of the commandant Although not an official prerequisite for the position most commandants are themselves graduates of the test pilot school As of September 2023 update Colonel James Valpiani is the commandant of the school 47 Gallery of USAF TPS Commandants nbsp Buzz Aldrin July 1971 February 1972 nbsp Gene Deatrick May 1967 June 1968 nbsp Jim Doolittle III April 1994 August 1996 nbsp Chuck Yeager July 1962 July 1966Notable alumni edit Main article List of U S Air Force Test Pilot School alumni TPS has produced many notable alumni including astronauts record setting aviators and senior Air Force leaders Gallery of USAF TPS Alumni nbsp Joe Engle Class 61C III nbsp Gus Grissom Class 56D nbsp Pete Knight Class 58C 63A nbsp Mike Loh Class 67BSee also editList of test pilot schoolsNotes edit a b USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 9 a b c d e f g h U S Air Force Test Pilot School History United States Air Force Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2008 08 10 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 33 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 10 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 50 a b c USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 17 412 Test Wing AFMC United States Air Force Archived from the original on 2015 09 27 Retrieved 2008 08 29 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 17 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 19 a b USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 20 a b U S Air Force Test Pilot School Instruction 99 107 Certified Current 4 May 2015 U S Air Force Test Pilot School Information PDF capture of the web page as at 2013 10 08 Air Force Instruction 99 107 p 4 AFI 48 123 AFOCD Quick Reference Guide p 273 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 18 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 21 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 37 Air Force Instruction 99 107 p 15 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 24 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 35 36 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 14 USAF TPS Graduate Course Catalog p 11 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 11 USAF TPS History Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Edwards AFB website Retrieved June 20 2008 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 14 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 15 Wright from the Start Ch 4 retrieved June 20 2008 a b Lopez Fighter Pilot s Heaven p 128 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 28 The Empire Test Pilots School Twenty Five Years ETPS Brochure 4th Ed HMSO for The Empire Test Pilots School 41 1968 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 36 a b c USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 38 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 40 The USAF was formed as a separate branch of the armed forces on 18 September 1947 Lopez Fighter Pilot s Heaven p 129 a b c USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 41 Historic California Posts California State Military Museum retrieved June 21 2008 Glenn Edwards Bio Archived 2008 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Air Force Link retrieved June 29 2008 Carey Howling Howland p 11 a b c USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 42 USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 43 a b USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond p 45 U S Air Force Test Pilot School History Edwards Air Force Base Retrieved 2020 05 01 Young Forging Aerospace Power for America pgs 3 4 Military Times Poor maintenance likely led to fatal T 38 crash October 15 2009 Cloys Robert 2023 09 05 ETFC Developing future test amp evaluation leaders United States Air Force Archived from the original on 2024 01 07 Retrieved 2024 01 07 During the ceremony Col James Valpiani United States Test Pilot School commandant addressed the class References edit Air Force Officer Classification Directory AFOCD PDF HQ AFPC DPPAC 2007 07 31 Retrieved 2008 07 20 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Graduate Course Catalog and Student Handbook 2007 08 PDF USAF TPS Curriculum Standards Division 2007 06 22 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2008 07 19 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Air Force Instruction 48 123 Vol 3 PDF Secretary of the Air Force 2006 06 05 Retrieved 2010 09 29 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Air Force Instruction 99 107 Test Pilot School PDF Secretary of the Air Force 2002 09 23 Retrieved 2008 07 19 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help USAF Test Pilot School 50 Years and Beyond Privately Published 1994 Carey Christopher T 2007 Howling Howland A history of NASA F 104B Starfighter N819NA PDF Retrieved 2010 09 29 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Eppley Charles V March 1963 History of the USAF Experimental Flight Test Pilot School 4 February 1951 12 October 1961 PDF USAF Archived from the original PDF on October 25 2010 Retrieved 2008 10 11 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kutyna Donald J November December 1969 The Aerospace Research Pilot School Air University Review XXI 1 United States Air Force 81 91 Retrieved 2008 08 29 Lopez Donald S 1995 Fighter Pilot s Heaven Flight Testing the Early Jets Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 1 56098 457 0 Retrieved 2008 06 21 Marrett George J 2008 Contrails Over the Mojave The Golden Age of Jet Flight Testing at Edwards Air Force Base Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 511 0 Retrieved 2008 08 09 Young James O 1997 Meeting the Challenge of Supersonic Flight Air Force Flight Test Center History Office ASIN B0006QV0BQ Retrieved 2008 06 22 Young James O 2007 Forging Aerospace Power for America PDF The U S Air Force Flight Test Center Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 12 Retrieved 2008 07 03 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help References editThis article contains information that came from a public domain government websiteExternal links edit U S Air Force Test Pilot School United States Air Force Retrieved September 4 2022 USAF TPS 07B May 19 2008 Archived from the original on August 27 2009 Retrieved February 18 2015 USAF TPS 08A USAF TPS 08B34 55 02 N 117 54 00 W 34 9171 N 117 9000 W 34 9171 117 9000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Air Force Test Pilot School amp oldid 1210902462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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