trainer

trainerSpanish Air Force Casa C-101 Aviojet, flown by the Patrulla Águila aerobatic display team on July 17, 2006, at the Royal International Air Tattoo, Fairford, Gloucestershire, Eng.

trainer, in military aviation, an airplane that is designed and used to train pilots to operate advanced aircraft effectively. The complicated modern military airplane requires a high degree of skill on the part of pilots. Military training programs commonly make use of a single-engine aircraft for primary training phases, with twin-jet trainers for transition stages.

Primary training airplanes are generally of simplified construction, with a minimum of complicated equipment. The transition trainers are considerably more complicated. They are fast and highly maneuverable and can be fitted with a variety of complicated equipment found also in combat types.

Training in navigation is generally given on a class basis, in which groups of students are taken aloft in a “flying classroom,” usually a twin-engined transport airplane containing a number of navigator’s stations at which each student can make his own observations and computations while in the air.

Because the use of high-speed, high-performance military airplanes for training purposes is expensive, difficult, and dangerous, a great deal of pilot and crew training is done in flight simulators (q.v.).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.