Royal_Air_Force_King_Air_B200_Training_Aircraft_MOD_45153010.jpg
Summary
Description Royal Air Force King Air B200 Training Aircraft MOD 45153010.jpg |
English:
King Air aircraft of 45(R) Squadron, based at RAF Cranwell, displaying the new livery.
The Beech King Air B200, the newest training aircraft in the RAF inventory, is a twin-engine turboprop monoplane, which first entered RAF service in 2004. It is used as an advanced, multi-engine pilot trainer by No 45(R) Squadron, which is part of No 3 Flying Training School based at RAF Cranwell, in Lincolnshire. Prior to flying the King Air, students who have been streamed to fly multi-engine aircraft at the end of elementary flying training undertake survival training and personal development training to prepare them for the rigours of operational service. They then join No 45(R) Squadron, and receive an additional 30 hours training on the multi-engine lead-in (MELIN) course, flying Firefly 260 aircraft. During the MELIN course, students are taught crew co-operation and procedural flying skills to prepare them for their advanced flying training on the King Air.
|
Date | |
Source | |
Author | Gordon Elias |
Permission
( Reusing this file ) |
Images are downloadable at high resolution, made available at http://www.defenceimagery.mod.uk for reuse under the OGL (Open Government License). |
Licensing
This file is licensed under the
Open Government Licence version 1.0
(
OGL v1.0
).
|
|
---|---|
Attribution: Photo: Gordon Elias/MOD | |
You are free to:
See the Open Government Licence page on Meta-Wiki for more information. http://NationalArchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/1/ OGL v1.0 Open Government License version 1.0 true truehttp://NationalArchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/1/ OGL v1.0 Open Government License version 1.0 true true |