Empire Test Pilots' School
Active | 21 June 1943 | – present
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Branch | Ministry of Defence (operated by QinetiQ) |
Type | Test pilot school |
Role | Training of test pilots and flight test engineers |
Part of | Air Warfare Centre |
Home station | MOD Boscombe Down |
Nickname(s) | ETPS |
Motto(s) | Learn to test; test to learn |
Aircraft |
The Empire Test Pilots' School (ETPS) is a British training school for test pilots and flight test engineers of fixed-wing and rotary-wing aircraft at MoD Boscombe Down in Wiltshire, England. It was established in 1943, the first of its type. The school moved to RAF Cranfield in October 1945, then to Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough in July 1947, before returning to Boscombe Down on 29 January 1968.[1]
Its motto is "Learn to test; test to learn".
ETPS is run by the MoD and defence contractor QinetiQ under a long-term agreement.
History[]
In 1943, Air Marshal Sir Ralph Sorley, Controller, Research and Development, MAP, formed the "Test Pilots' Training Flight" at RAF Boscombe Down after many pilots died testing the many new aircraft introduced during the Second World War.[2]
On 21 June 1943, the unit became the Test Pilots' School within the Aeroplane and Armament Experimental Establishment (A&AEE) at Boscombe Down.[3] The school was "to provide suitably trained pilots for testing duties in aeronautical research and development establishments within the service and the industry".[4] It graduated one group of students, the Number 1 Course, which began in mid-1943 and formally ended on 29 February 1944,[5] before the school's name was changed to the "Empire Test Pilots' School" (ETPS) on 28 July 1944.[1]
The first training course, held by the Commandant, Wing Commander Samuel "Sammy" Wroath with G. Maclaren Humphreys, a civilian, as Technical Instructor, was initially attended by 18 pilots, drawn largely from the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the Fleet Air Arm of the Royal Navy but included three civilian attendees (all from the Bristol Aeroplane Company).[6] Five students found the standard of maths required on the course to be too high and left within the first week;[7] the 13 students who completed the first course comprised 11 from the RAF (including one American, Sqn Ldr JC Nelson, who was serving with one of the Eagle Squadrons) and two from the FAA.[8] Of those who attended No. 1 Course, five eventually died testing aircraft.[9]
Due to the rapid growth of the A&AEE, at Boscombe Down, the school moved to RAF Cranfield in October 1945. On 12 July 1947, it was attached to the Royal Aircraft Establishment, Farnborough, where it remained for almost 21 years, flying a wide variety of aircraft types, before returning to Boscombe Down on 29 January 1968.[1]
Until 1963, the course catered to both fixed-wing and rotary-wing pilots, with the latter specializing late in the course. In 1963, a separate rotary-wing course was established,[10] followed in 1974 by a course for Flight test engineers. The school also offers a number of short courses "to meet specific Air Test and Evaluation (AT&E) training needs of the wider flight test community".[11]
In 2001, ETPS was included with those research departments sold off by the Government to Carlyle Group during the formation of QinetiQ. It is now a partnership between QinetiQ and the UK MoD.
The Empire Test Pilots' School was the first of its kind, and was soon followed by other similar schools, such as the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base, California in 1944, the United States Naval Test Pilot School in Maryland in 1945 and the EPNER in France (École du Personnel Navigant d'Essais et de Réception) in 1946. Other schools in India (Indian Air Force Test Pilot School in Bangalore) and Japan were established in later years. Some of these schools operate exchange programmes, which expand the variety of aircraft the students have available to them for gaining flight test experience.[12]
In addition to such student exchanges, British, French and American schools share access to their aircraft, so that students can experience a wider range of aircraft types during their respective courses.[13]
ETPS commandants[]
Commandants' names prior to 1968 from the ETPS 25th anniversary brochure;[14] 1968–88, from Wing Commander "Robby" Robinson's "Tester Zero One".[15] The term "Commandant" was succeeded in 1976 by "Chief Instructor" and in 1980 by "Officer Commanding".
From | Until | Rank/style | Name | Decorations | Service | Country | ETPS course |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1943 | 1944 | Wg Cdr | S. Wroath | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1944 | 1945 | Gp Capt. | JFX McKenna | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1945 | 1947 | Gp Capt. | HJ Wilson | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1947 | 1948 | Gp Capt. | S R Ubee | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1949 | 1950 | Gp Capt. | LS Snaith | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1950 | 1953 | Gp Capt. | A. E. Clouston | DSO, DFC, AFC | RAF | New Zealand | – |
1953 | 1957 | Gp Capt. | S. Wroath | CBE, AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1957 | 1959 | Gp Capt. | RE Burns | CBE, DFC | RAF | United Kingdom | – |
1960 | 1961 | Capt. | KR Hickson | AFC and bar | RN | United Kingdom | No. 4 (1946) |
1962 | 1965 | Gp Capt. | RA Watts | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 6 (1947) |
1966 | 1969 | Gp Capt. | W. J. P. Straker | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 9 (1950) |
1969 | 1970 | Capt. | P.C.S. Chilton | AFC | RN | United Kingdom | No. 7 (1948) |
1971 | 1973 | Gp Capt. | D.P. Hall | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 18 (1959) |
1973 | 1975 | Gp Capt. | H.A. Merriman | CBE, AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 16 (1957) |
1975 | 1976 | Gp Capt. | M.K. Adams | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 22 FW/No. 1 RW (1963) |
1976 | 1977 | Wg Cdr | J.A. "Robby" Robinson | AFC | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 21 (1962) |
1977 | 1980 | Wg Cdr | J.E. Watts-Phillips | – | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 23 FW (1964) |
1981 | 1985 | Wg Cdr | R.S. Hargreaves | Bsc(Eng), MRAeS | – | United Kingdom | EPNER 1965–66 |
1985 | 1988 | Wg Cdr | J.W.A. Bolton | BSc, MRAeS | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 33 FW (1974) |
1988 | — | Wg Cdr | W.L.M. Mayer | AFC, MRAeS | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 7 RW (1969) |
Unknown | |||||||
1996 | 1998 | Wg Cdr | Laurie Hilditch | – | RAF | United Kingdom | (USNTPS Class 100 1991) |
1998 | 2001 | Wg Cdr | Dave Best | OBE, Legion of Merit | RAF | United Kingdom | No. 48 FW (1989) |
2001 | 2005 | Cdr | 'Charlie' Brown | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | No. 47 FW/No. 26 RW (1988) |
2006 | 2007 | Cdr | CP Maude | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | n/a |
2007 | 2009 | Cdr | Phil Hayde | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | n/a |
2010 | 2012 | Cdr | Simon Sparkes[16] | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | No. 37 RW (1999) |
2012 | 2014 | Cdr | Mark (Sparky) MacLeod | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | No. 41 RW (2003) |
2014 | 2017 | Cdr | Stephen (Croc) Crockatt | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | No. 40 RW (2002) |
2017 | 2019 | Cdr | Stuart Irwin | n/a | RN | United Kingdom | No. 50 RW (2012) |
Aircraft[]
As at 18 August 2019 ETPS uses the following types of aircraft:[17]
Aircraft | Origin | Variant(s) | No operated | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rotary Wing | |||||
AW109 | Italy | AW109E Power | 2 | ||
AS350 Écureuil | France | H125 | 4 | ||
Bell 412 | United States | 412 | 2 | One operated from England, second operated in Canada. | |
Bell 205 | United States | 205 | 1 | Operated in Canada alongside the NRC. | |
Fixed Wing | |||||
Pilatus PC-21 | Switzerland | PC-21 | 2 | Custom developed with a flight test instrumentation suite for ETPS. | |
Grob G120 | Germany | G120TP | 2 | Custom developed with a flight test instrumentation suite for ETPS. | |
BAE 146 | UK | RJ70/100 | 2 | Used as a flying classroom for Flight test engineer students. | |
DA42 | Austria | DA42 | 1 | Used to give test pilot students experience with general aviation aircraft. | |
Saab Gripen | Sweden | Gripen D | 1 | ||
Learjet | United States | Learjet 45 | 4 | Operated by Calspan in the US. |
ETPS graduates[]
ETPS graduates who have made significant contributions to aviation and/or space exploration.
To collapse the expanded table, click on "hide"; to expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Name column header.
hideName | Course | Year | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Baudry, Patrick | No. 37 FW | 1978 | Flew aboard NASA's Space Shuttle 1985 mission STS-51-G. |
de Winne, Frank | No. 51 FW | 1992 | The first European Space Agency astronaut to command a space mission when he served as commander of the 2009 International Space Station Expedition 21, his second ISS mission. |
Cheli, Maurizio | No. 47 FW | 1988 | European Space Agency astronaut aboard Space Shuttle mission STS-75 (with Claude Nicollier, another ETPS graduate) in 1995. |
Duke, Neville | No. 4/5 | 1946/7 | World War II Fighter ace, later test pilot at Hawker Aircraft. On 7 September 1953, Duke set a new world air speed record of 727.63 mph (1,171.01 km/h), flying Hunter WB188. |
Giddings, Michael | No. 4/5 | 1946/7 | Air Marshal Sir Kenneth Charles Michael Giddings KCB, OBE, DFC, AFC & Bar |
Goodhart, Nicholas | No. 4 | 1946 | Rear Admiral H.C.Nicholas 'Nick' Goodhart, CB, Legion of Merit, FRAeS, RN rtd, invented the mirror-sight deck landing system for aircraft carriers; record-breaking glider pilot; holder of the Royal Aero Club's silver medal and the FAI's Paul Tissandier Diploma for "those who have served the cause of Aviation in general and Sporting Aviation in particular, by their work, initiative, devotion or in other ways" |
Haigneré, Jean-Pierre | No. 40 FW | 1981 | French Air Force pilot, later CNES and ESA cosmonaut on the 1993 Franco-Russian Altaïr and 1999 Soyuz TM-29 missions to the Mir space station |
Hammond, L. Blaine Jr. | No. 40 FW | 1981 | USAF pilot and NASA astronaut; flew on Space Shuttle missions STS-39 and STS-64 |
Iven Carl Kincheloe Jr. | No. 12 | 1954 | USAF test pilot |
McCulley, Michael J. | – | – | Captain, US Navy and NASA astronaut who was pilot of the 1989 Space Shuttle mission STS-34 |
No. 2 | 1944/45 | Lt Col. USAF, first Commandant of the US Air Force Test Pilot School | |
No. 32 FW | 1973 | Air Vice-Marshal Peter Nicholson, appointed Air Commander Australia on 9 April 1996; admitted as an Officer of the Order of Australia in the 1999 Australia Day Honours[18] | |
Nicollier, Claude | No. 47 FW | 1988 | First astronaut from Switzerland; has flown on four Space Shuttle missions: STS-46, STS-61, STS-75 (with Maurizio Cheli, another ETPS graduate) and STS-103; full professor of Spatial Technology at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne from 2007 |
Peake, Timothy | No. 43 RW | 2005 | Former British Army Air Corps helicopter pilot, he is the first British citizen to be selected as an astronaut by ESA. |
Pogue, Bill | No. 22 FW | 1963 | Pilot of Skylab 4 (1973–74). |
Tognini, Michel | No. 41 FW | 1982 | French and ESA astronaut who served on the 1992 Soyuz TM-15 and 1999 Space Shuttle Columbia STS-93 missions. |
Twiss, Peter | No. 3 | 1945 | On 10 March 1956 in the Fairey Delta 2, a supersonic delta-winged research plane, Twiss raised the world air speed record from 822.1 mph (1,323 km/h) to 1,132 mph (1811 km/h). The FD2 was the first aircraft to exceed 1,000 mph in level flight. |
Worden, Al | No. 23 FW | 1964 | Command module pilot for the 1971 Apollo 15 moon mission. |
Żurakowski, Janusz | No. 2 | 1944/45 | Highly decorated Polish and RAF World War II Spitfire pilot, later test pilot with Glosters (Meteor, Javelin) and Avro Canada (Arrow). |
Course trophies and awards[]
Recipients' names prior to 1968 are taken from the ETPS 25th anniversary brochure.[14] Others up to and including 1983, unless otherwise stated, from Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, pp. 124–36.
In the tables of trophy winners the following abbreviation are used in the course names:
- FW: Fixed wing
- RW: Rotary wing
- FTE: Flight test engineer
Legend
The individual was killed in an aviation accident.
McKenna Trophy[]
In memory of the second Commandant of the School, Group Captain JFX McKenna, AFC, killed in a flying accident while serving in that post.[a][19] Initially the school awarded the McKenna Trophy to the best fixed-wing student, but it is now open to the rotary-wing course as well.
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse again, choose "hide".
Edwards Trophy[]
This trophy is awarded by the Edwards Air Force Base in California to the student who makes the greatest progress on the course.
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse the expanded table, click on "hide".
Hawker Hunter Trophy[]
This trophy, a model of the Hawker Hunter, was first awarded in 1960 by the Hawker Aircraft Company to the student who wrote the best Preview Handling report on the course. Since 1966 syndicates of two or three students have carried out the Preview Exercise; the trophy is awarded to the best team.
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse again, click on "hide".
Patuxent Shield[]
This trophy, instituted in 1961, is awarded by the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School, Patuxent River, to the runner-up for the McKenna Trophy.
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse again, click on "hide".
Westland Trophy[]
The Westland Trophy, originally presented by Westland Aircraft Limited in 1963, is awarded to the best all-round student on the Rotary Wing Course.
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse again, click on "hide".
Sir Alan Cobham Award[]
Presented to ETPS in 1974 by Michael Cobham, son of Sir Alan Cobham, this trophy is awarded to the fixed wing student who demonstrates the highest standard of flying during the course. The trophy is a silver model of a Short Singapore II flying-boat, which was originally awarded to Sir Alan and his wife in 1928 "in commemoration of their epic circuit of Africa flight in 1927 in such a flying-boat".[45]
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse the expanded table, click on "hide".
Dunlop Trophy[]
The Dunlop Trophy, initially awarded by the Dunlop Rubber company in 1974, is awarded to the best student on each Flight Test Engineers' course.
To expand the collapsed table, click on "show" in the Year column header; to collapse the expanded table, click on "hide".
See also[]
- List of test pilot schools
- Rotary Wing Test Squadron
- Boscombe Down
References[]
Notes[]
- ^ On 19 January 1945 flying a North American Mustang IV, when an ammunition box cover detached at high speed, causing structural failure of a wing. The aircraft crashed on the perimeter of Old Sarum airfield.
- ^ Sqn Ldr Whittome died in a flying accident in a Spitfire in 1948.[22]
- ^ Flt Lt Hough died in a flying accident in a Sycamore in 1953.[23]
- ^ Ross died in a flying accident in a Javelin in 1954.[24]
- ^ Capt. Fryklund died in a flying accident in 1954.[24]
- ^ Capt. Bignamini died in a flying accident.[24]
- ^ Died in an accident in an F-100 Super Sabre while on Reserve training with the Air National Guard in 1965.[25]
- ^ Died in a flying accident on 10 August 1976.[39]
- ^ A. Shaked died in a flying accident in a Dornier Do 28.[40]
Citations[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Sturtivant 1997, p. 112.
- ^ "Origins of Flight Test". ETPS. QinetiQ. Archived from the original on 7 March 2010. Retrieved 3 April 2010.
- ^ Sturtivant 1997, p. 44.
- ^ Johnson 1986, p. 19.
- ^ Johnson 1986, p. 31.
- ^ Johnson 1986, p. 23.
- ^ Johnson 1986, p. 25.
- ^ Johnson 1986, p. 27.
- ^ Johnson 1986, p. 32.
- ^ Field, Hugh (8 March 1973). "Learning to Test". Flight International. Flight global. 103 (3339): 340. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
- ^ "Short Courses". ETPS. QinetiQ. Archived from the original on 12 May 2010. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
- ^ Johnson 1986, pp. 39, 40.
- ^ "Learning to Test". Flight International. Flight global. 158 (4757): 41. 4 December 2000. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b ETPS 1968.
- ^ Robinson 2007, p. 280.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "CO ETPS", Our training team, QinetiQ, 2010.
- ^ "Our Aircraft". ETPS. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
- ^ Australian Chapter, The Association of Old Crows.
- ^ "1940–45", Test Flying Memorial of British test pilots and engineers dead while test-flying[dead link] .
- ^ "DR Cuming", The Canberra Times (biographical detail), 17 April 2002[permanent dead link].
- ^ "Test Pilots Dine – Passing-out Dinner and Presentation of McKenna Trophy at Cranfield". Flight Magazine. 95 (LI): 238. 20 March 1947. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
- ^ Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 126.
- ^ Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 127.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 128.
- ^ Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 130.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 83.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "ETPS – The McKenna Dinner". Flight Magazine. 102 (3329): 917. 28 December 1972. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
- ^ "Chief Test Pilot Thomas Morgenfeld". AIAA Savannah. 2010. Archived from the original on 16 June 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "ETPS McKenna Dinner". Flight International. 113 (3592): 172. 21 January 1978. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i "Boscombe Down Pilots' Award". Flight International. 114 (3640): 2239. 22 December 1978. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h "The Empire Test Pilots' School End-of-Course McKenna Dinner". Flight International. 119 (3741): 10. 17 January 1981. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Johnson 1986, p. 270.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "NASA Astronauts with Texas Roots". Texas Space Grant Consortium. 1 August 2004. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ "Astronaut biography – Frank de Winne". European Space Agency. 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ "Royal Navy to celebrate centenary of naval aviation with flypast over HMS Illustrious in London". Your Defence News. Red Mist Media. 1 May 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2010.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Trophies", The Daily Telegraph, 14 December 2001
- ^ "Top Stories: Best Test Pilot". Airforce News. AU: Defence Public Affairs and Corporate Communication; Directorate of Internal Communications. 45 (3). 13 March 2003. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- ^ "Pilots". The Yakovlevs (air display team). 2010. Retrieved 5 April 2010.[permanent dead link]
- ^ Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 131.
- ^ Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 133.
- ^ "Newsletter" (PDF). The Hawker Association. 2006. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ Farley, John (18 February 2007). "Aviators Extraordinary". PPRuNe. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ "Astronaut biography – Michel Tognini". European Space Agency. 21 November 2005. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
- ^ "Eric Fitzpatrick". Empire Test Pilots' School. QinetiQ. Archived from the original on 18 April 2011. Retrieved 20 December 2010.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Rawlings & Sedgwick 1991, p. 90.
- ^ "Test & Research Pilots" (Blogger), Flight Test Engineers (web log), January 2008.
- ^ Leo, Jeoh (2007). "Tech Edge: Near-Space, Near Future". Pointer: Journal of the Singapore Armed Forces. Government of Singapore. 33 (1). Retrieved 11 April 2010.
- ^ Alle Hens: Logboek – Wie Wat Waar (PDF) (in Dutch), Royal Netherlands Navy, 2009, p. 35, retrieved 11 April 2010[permanent dead link]
Bibliography[]
- The Empire Test Pilots' School – Twenty Five Years (brochure)
|format=
requires|url=
(help) (4 ed.), HMSO for The Empire Test Pilots' School, 1968, 68 pp. - Johnson, Brian (1986), Test Pilot, BBC Books, p. 287, ISBN 0-563-20502-4.
- Rawlings, John; Sedgwick, Hilary (1991), Learn to Test, Test to Learn – The History of the Empire Test Pilots' School, Shrewsbury: Airlife, p. 138, ISBN 1-85310-080-3.
- Robinson, JA 'Robby' (2007), Tester Zero One, Old Forge Publishing, ISBN 978-1-906183-00-4.
- Sturtivant, Ray (1997), Royal Air Force Flying Training and Support Units, Air Britain (Historians), ISBN 0-85130-252-1.
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Empire Test Pilots' School. |
- Official website
- ETPS Association, UK.
- QinetiQ.
- Service biography of Air Marshal Sir Ralph S. Sorley, K.C.B., O.B.E., D.S.C, D.F.C. (1898–1974), RAF Web.
- Aircraft & Systems Testing Establishment, Bharat rakshak. The Indian Air Force's flight evaluation and test training school, Bangalore.
- "Exchange of Test Pilots Proposed", Flight, Flight global, 1948.
- "Torch in the Sky", Flight (article), Flight global, 1949 on the purpose and practice of the ETPS.
- Air force test units and formations
- Aviation schools
- Educational institutions established in 1943
- 1943 establishments in England