Future Raptor pilots test mettle on Falcons

  • Published
  • By 2nd Lt. Bryan Bouchard
  • 56th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
The first pilots ever selected to fly the F-22 without previous fighter experience started preparing for that day Jan. 14, when they entered the 63rd Fighter Squadron here for the Raptor Lead-in course. 

The Raptor Lead-in course is a five-week opportunity for the four new pilots to experience flying a high-G, high performance aircraft with an instructor in the back seat before taking the stick of the $169 million, single-seat Raptor by themselves, according to Maj. Daniel Munter, 56th Training Squadron instructor pilot. 

"This course is designed to be an intermediate step to (the pilots) taking the F-22 up for the first time and being successful," Major Munter said. 

Pilots and other instructors from the 56th Fighter Wing have been working since early 2007 on this course, which is not necessarily designed to teach the pilots how to fly the F-16, but more over to give them experience in a high-G environment, while familiarizing them with other aspects of the fighter aviation which were previously unavailable to them during their training. 

Prior to arriving at Luke, the four competed as part of a pool of eight, who recently graduated undergraduate pilot training, the major said. From there, the eight newly-graduated pilots were sent to Randolph Air Force Base, Texas for the Introduction to Fighter Fundamentals course, where they were familiarized with fighters via the T-38 Talon trainer aircraft. By the end of that course, the final four pilots were selected to become F-22 pilots. Raptor pilots currently flying the airframe had previous flying experience in other fighter aircraft. 

Major Munter said by learning to push the envelope in the F-16, the Raptor Lead-in course is designed to help them be successful in the maneuvering dynamics of the F-22. 

One of the major benefits to their F-16 familiarization is the similarities of the two aircraft, specifically the side-stick controls. Other aircraft in the Air Force inventory are controlled with the controls between the pilot's legs. The fly-by-wire system is unique to these two fighter aircraft. 

Other items the students will learn more about while at Luke include night flying, day and night landing, air-to-air refueling and work to increase their ability to perform the anti-G straining maneuver. This last item is key, Major Munter said. While the T-38 Talon is quick and maneuverable, it may have pushed the pilots to experience six Gs, or six times the force of gravity. While flying the F-16, the pilots will experience up to nine Gs, making their transition to the most advanced fighter in the world, the Raptor, easier to handle. 

During the pilots' in-brief, Brig. Gen. Tom Jones, 56th Fighter Wing commander, said that this course is exactly what instructors at Luke are used to doing. 

"You will get a lot of experience here from a fighter perspective and an intelligence perspective that's very transferable to the F-22," he said. 

For the new pilots, the opportunity to fly the high-performance F-16 before going on to the Air Force's most advanced fighter is something to which they all look forward. 

"Learning to fly an advanced fighter from world-class instructors is going to be a great opportunity for our class as we transition to the F-22," said 1st Lt. Austin Skelley, a Casa Grande, Ariz., native. 

After completing the course here, the Lieutenant Skelley, along with 1st Lts. Ryan Shelhorse, Marcus McGinn and Dan Dickinson, will go on to the 43rd Fighter Squadron at Tyndall Air Force Base, Fla., where after more than two years of training, they will take on the F-22.