Army Airforce Pilot Training (1 results)
More imagesSeller: Max Rambod Inc, Woodland Hills, CA, U.S.A.Max Rambod Inc
Contact seller5-star sellerWorld War II U.S. Army Air Forces Link Trainer training photo archive of five large format silver gelatin prints, circa 1942 to 1945, documenting simulator instruction during the wartime expansion of American military flight training using the first effective training device. The men wear Army Air Forces uniforms, aviation badge…s, officer caps, and the winged star shoulder sleeve insignia commonly called the Hap Arnold emblem, an insignia approved in 1942 for AAF personnel. The photographs place the pilot inside a ground based cockpit trainer while instructors and fellow cadets observe, a visual record of how instrument procedure, radio communication, and cockpit discipline were taught before airborne practice. Invented by Edwin Albert Link in 1929, the Link Trainer was the world's first widely successful and effective mechanical flight simulator. Affectionately dubbed the "Blue Box," it revolutionized aviation by allowing pilots to safely train for blind, instrument-only flying and poor weather conditions without leaving the ground. Photo archive of 5 silver gelatin photographs, 8 x 10 inches, United States, circa 1942 to 1945. The photographs show Army Air Forces cadets and officers in a training room with a large cockpit simulator built with stub wings, a tail, round U.S. star insignia, hinged canopy panels, external bracing, and a cockpit just large enough for one seated trainee. Several images show a trainee wearing headphones and working inside the enclosed trainer; another shows a man raising the canopy while holding a hand microphone; another shows three uniformed men observing a cadet seated at the controls. One image shows a pilot being congratulated or greeted at the simulator door by three officers, with a placard on the fuselage reading "International flight." Visible uniform details include the AAF shoulder patch on a cadet's sleeve, pilot or aircrew wings over shirt pockets, aviation branch collar devices, and officer cap insignia, linking the group to the Army Air Forces rather than the postwar U.S. Air Force. The Link Trainer became one of the defining instruments of World War II flight instruction because it moved dangerous lessons in blind flying, night navigation, instrument reading, and radio procedure into a controlled classroom setting. The U.S. Army Air Corps had adopted the device before the war, and wartime mobilization turned simulator instruction into a standard component of pilot preparation as the Army Air Forces trained pilots at unprecedented scale for bomber, fighter, transport, and liaison service. These photographs are strongest where they show the training process itself: the student isolated inside the cockpit, the instructor watching from outside, the headset and microphone linking simulated flight to communication procedure, and the fuselage marked for an "International flight" exercise. Light curling, and occasional creasing; some handling marks in the margins. Overall good condition. A focused visual record of World War II Army Air Forces simulator training and the classroom machinery that converted cadets into wartime pilots.