The People's Liberation Army Air Forces is consolidating pilot training
around the JL-10.
New Report:
China Cuts Pilot Training
Time, Aims to Modernize by 2030
Nov. 26, 2024 | By John A. Tirpak
China is cutting down on the time it takes to
train raw students to be fighter pilots and transitioning to a full fleet of
fourth-generation training aircraft—but won’t have a fully modernized pilot
training system until 2030, according to a new paper from Air University’s
China Aerospace Studies Institute.
In the paper,
analyst Derek Solen cited “new developments” in pilot training divulged by
China in the last few months. The Shijiazhuang Flight Academy, one of three
training centers for the People’s Liberation Army Air Force, has “completely
replaced an older training program and the aircraft used in it,” referring to
third-generation fighters equivalent to Russia’s Mig-21. This change has cut
about year from the four-year training program.
“Meanwhile, the Xi’an and Harbin Flight Academies are
establishing new units to train recent graduates to transition to fighter
aircraft, shifting the burden of that training from combat units to the
academies,” Solen wrote. “Both these developments indicate that the [People’s
Liberation Army Air Force] is steadily making progress in long-standing efforts
to streamline and centralize its initial fighter pilot training program,
efforts that should be complete by the beginning of the next decade.”
Solen told Air & Space Forces Magazine that
China’s pilot training academies have been consolidated from six to three over
the last decade, and that a further year could be cut from the curriculum
because of the success of the Hongdu JL-10 trainer, a derivative of the
Russian/Italian Yak-130. The fly-by-wire, glass cockpit trainer is the aircraft
around which the People’s Liberation Army Air Forces seems to be building most
of its flight instruction, he said. No other advanced trainer appears to be in
the works.
Solen offered an educated estimate that China is
producing about 400 pilots a year—and that number is increasing slowly. By
comparison, the U.S. Air Force is producing about 1,350 pilots per year, though
that figure is short of its goal
between 1,800 and 2,000.
PLAAF pilot production “kind of bottlenecks at the
university,” Solen said, and this limits the flow of students through the
system. To substantially increase production, “it’s going to require more
aircraft and more instructors,” he added.
China’s flight instruction program from basic
aviation/officer student training to frontline service takes about four years,
about twice as long as the Air Force’s program, in which students go from
primary instruction to operational squadrons in about two years.
Solen said China is not yet mimicking USAF’s new
plan of using simulation and individualized instruction to accelerate the time
it takes for a flyer to go from undergraduate student to flight lead, with
students progressing at their own pace. However, China is increasing its use of
simulators, and they are becoming more advanced, with a high-fidelity cockpit
surrounded by a video dome, used primarily at operational units.
Pilots chosen for transports and bombers are usually
those who don’t succeed in the fighter track, Solen said. The PLAAF’s concept
is to maximize the investment already made in those students, he noted. Each of
the flying academies have separate programs within them for large, multiengine
aircraft.
Solen noted in his analysis that China doesn’t
have service academies or generic officer training schools. Rather, after three
years of officer training and education at PLAAF’s aviation university,
students begin primary flight training. They complete that school after a
fourth year, after which they do a year of intermediate training, followed by a
year of advanced training. Those that graduate go on to a year of specific
instruction with the combat unit to which they’re assigned.
Shijiazhaung seems to be eliminating that
intermediate year of instruction.
“The Shijiazhuang Flight Academy’s elimination of
intermediate flight training and its retirement of the JL-8 indicates that
almost all the academy’s training brigades now operate the JL-10,” Solen wrote
in the paper. “The academy is almost certain to have one last training brigade
operating the JL-9, but it is likely to retire the JL-9 next year after the
last group of pilot candidates to have undergone intermediate flight training
in the JL-8 complete their advanced flight training in mid-2025.” He expects
the Harbin academy to transition fully to JL-10 instruction in 2026.
The J-10 is China’s equivalent of the F-16, and
two-seat versions are used for advanced fighter and strike training.
“Although only flight instructors have been
mentioned training in the J-10 at the Xi’an Flight Academy, it is likely that
the academy will begin conducting transition training for new pilots in the
autumn of 2024 if it has not already done so,” according to the paper.
“This would conform with past practice: the
Shijiazhuang Flight Academy received the J-10 one year before it began
conducting transition training. The Harbin Flight Academy is likely to have
begun transition training with the J-11 by late 2023 because flight training
commences in September of each year, so the air-to-ground attack training
indicates the existence of a training program that began in the previous year.”
The PLAAF has not more radically accelerated or
reformed its pilot training program because it’s largely locked into the
traditional tempo of the instruction, Solen said.
“They’ve … retained that cyclical induction
process,” he noted. “I suppose they could go more quickly, but if they do that
actually kind of screws everything up,” because officer instruction paces
flight training. The tempo calls for a September-to-July instruction period,
followed by graduation, for each phase of instruction.
“They’ve worked to kind of separate some of the
officer training and some of the aviation education, but it’s still kind of
mixed together. It’s all at the same pace,” he noted. “And so every year,
they’re inducting new potential pilots, but they do it at the very same time
each year … because they can’t bring anybody on [at] a different schedule.” The
idea is not necessarily to take more time to produce more seasoned pilots, but
throughout their training, students get substantially more flying hours than
their American counterparts, and the Chinese seem comfortable with that.
“The schedule dictates everything,” Solen said.
“It’s a very deliberate process,” he added. “It
hasn’t been fast, but I can see steady progress.” Since the arrival of the
JL-10, “that was really the final piece needed to really get this process
moving. Until then they were … hindered by lack of an appropriate trainer.
While they were trying to reform the curriculum, it wasn’t well matched with
the aircraft that they had.”
That was problematic because the PLAAF’s trainers
were preparing students for third-generation fighters as it was introducing
fourth- and fifth-generation fighters like the J-10, J-15, and J-20. That extra
year may have been necessary to help students make the transition.
“It didn’t really match,” he said. Even the JL-10
may be insufficiently advanced to prepare students for the J-20, China’s
premier stealth fighter, Solen noted.
While the PLAAF will likely “retain some old
trainers and the old training program for almost as long as it continues to
operate some third-generation fighters given the progress of the PLAAF’s effort
to replace such fighters, it is safe to predict that [they] will all be retired
around 2030,” Solen said. The older fighter trainers “will probably be left to
a shrinking group of experienced pilots whose retirements may coincide with the
retirement of their aircraft,” Solen wrote.
“It is likely that the PLAAF will need until at
least 2030 to establish enough new training brigades to completely shift
transition training away from combat units,” he concluded. The pace of this
effort “could increase as each flight academy acquires more experience and
personnel to accomplish it.”
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