US Air Force Continues to Retire Heavy Aircraft Trainer, Laughlin AF Base Bid Farewell to its Last T-1A Jayhawk

Laughlin Air Force Base in Texas bid farewell to its last T-1A Jayhawk last month, as the Air Force continues its drive to retire the heavy aircraft trainer

Washington: Laughlin Air Force Base’s last Jayhawk, from the 86th Flying Training Squadron, took off from the base December 17. It joined a pair of T-6A Texan IIs and a pair of T-38C Talons as the centerpiece of a five-plane flyover, which twice passed over Laughlin’s airfield and air traffic control tower. After the other planes split off, the T-1 continued to its final resting place at “The Boneyard,” an airplane graveyard at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona.

“We stand on the shoulders of giants,” Lt Col Nathan Hedden, commander of the 86th, said in a release. “All of the [pilots] who have done this before have left a legacy of excellent performance and excellent training. This unit has offered so much to the Air Force.”

ads

Airmen have learned the basics of piloting cargo planes or tanker aircraft by flying T-1s for more than three decades. But the twin-engine jet — originally built by Raytheon subsidiary Beech — is aging, and the Air Force started paring down its fleet of 177 T-1s in 2023. The Air Force had 75 T-1s last year, and aims to further cut them to 53 in 2025 as the service prepares to bring on the new T-7A Redhawk trainer.

The Air Force said in early 2022, when announcing plans to start retiring the Jayhawk, that new pilot training techniques, such as virtual reality, would allow it to phase out the T-1. Improvements to the T-6 would also let aspiring pilots learn to fly mobility planes on a single aircraft, the Air Force said. This is allowing the service to retire the least-capable T-1s, which would otherwise need to have their engines replaced.

Aspiring Air Force pilots first fly the T-6 during undergraduate pilot training, and then roughly 900 students are selected to move on to learn to fly mobility aircraft. Under the old system, those students flew the T-1 for about five months before moving on to more mobility-specific lessons. But the Air Force is moving to a simulator-based system that allows those students to learn advanced flight skills much more quickly.

Laughlin’s 47th Flying Training Wing will keep teaching students to fly in the T-6 and T-38C Talon until the T-7 comes online. The 99th Flying Training Squadron at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph in Texas said goodbye to its last Jayhawk in July 2024, which also flew to Davis-Monthan for retirement.

big bang
raksha-anirveda-icon

Raksha Anirveda's editorial desk team brings in the collective experience of creative professionals - a fine mix of senior copy editors, writers, proofreaders and designers. Working as a team, they continuously create, manage, and curate content to sustain the magazine's profile and reputation in line with market trends and achieve magazine's goal.

More like this

Afghanistan-Pakistan Conflict: Terrain-Specific Operational Analysis

The Afghanistan-Pakistan border, historically volatile and rugged, has become...

Budget Analysis: Standing Committee on Defence Needs to Change Tack

Since its constitution in April 1993 to exercise legislative...

Restoring Order in an Anarchic World

Both intellectuals and lay persons say that war is,...

GRSE Adds Third ASW SWC to Navy’s Arsenal with INS Anjadip Commissioning

Kolkata/Chennai: Yet another feather was added to the cap of...

India’s ‘Viksit Bharat’ Journey Unfolds Amid Challenging Maritime Environment: CNS Admiral Tripathi

Chennai: Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi,...

EDGE and Republic of Korea’s DAPA Advance Major Defence Cooperation

Abu Dhabi, UAE: EDGE Group has signed a Defence...

Policy to Practice: Positive Trajectory, Yet Far From a Transformative Impact

Around the same time as President Trump was sworn-in...

India’s Strategic Calibration in West Asia

Defence and security have emerged as a consequential and...
Indian Navy Special Edition 2025spot_img