2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School
Appearance
2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School | |
---|---|
2e École de pilotage des Forces canadiennes (French) | |
Country | Canada |
Branch | Royal Canadian Air Force |
Type | Military school |
Role | Flying training |
Part of | 15 Wing Moose Jaw |
Garrison/HQ | CFB Moose Jaw |
Nickname(s) | Big 2 |
Website | rcaf-arc |
2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School (2CFFTS; French: 2e École de pilotage des Forces canadiennes) is one of the Royal Canadian Air Force's training centres for pilots and also one of the facilities of the NATO Flying Training in Canada (NFTC) program.[1][2]
History
[edit]The school is at CFB Moose Jaw. Prior to operating the CT-155 and CT-156, 2CFFTS flew the CT-114 Tutor from 1964 until 1999.[1]
Pilots at the school are in the Advanced Training section of the CF program with focus on:[1]
- Phase II – Basic course with the CT-156 Harvard II after which students will be streamed into the different platforms (jet, multi-engine, or helicopter).
- Phase III Jet – Advanced course on the CT-156 Harvard II
- Phase IV Conversion – Conversion to the CT-155 Hawk to prepare students for further training at CFB Cold Lake
Images
[edit]-
Raytheon CT156 Harvard II of 2 CFFTS, at CFB Moose Jaw, 3 November 2005 undergoing maintenance
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CT-114 Tutor jet trainer and the old Moose Jaw control tower in the spring of 1982
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CT-114 Tutors belonging to 2 Canadian Forces Flying Training School parked on the ramp at CFB Moose Jaw, 1982
Badges
[edit]-
2 CFFTS Big 2 badge 1981
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"A" Flight badge 2008
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"B" Flight badge 1981
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"C" Flight badge 1981
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"D" Flight badge 1981
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"E" Flight badge 1981. Eagle Flight was the Ground Training School (GTS)
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Standards Flight badge 1981. Snapper Flight was responsible for evaluating students through flight testing.
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Qualified Flying Instructor badge 1981
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Air Force Public Affairs / Department of National Defence (November 2006). "15 WING – MOOSE JAW : UNITS 2CFFTS". Archived from the original on 5 April 2007. Retrieved 14 May 2008.
- ^ Brennan, William J. (14 December 2017). "Moose Jaw". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada.
- ^ Dempsey, Daniel V. (2002). A Tradition of Excellence - Canada's Airshow Team Heritage. Victoria: High Flight Enterprises Ltd. p. 536. ISBN 0-9687817-0-5.