Chinese naval officials
working at a land-based training facility for carrier-capable jets have
taken some time to explain how their training works.
Pilots at the testing facility are practicing on China's home-developed J-15 fighter jets.
The jets have been designed specifically to take off and land on the Liaoning, China's first aircraft carrier.
But before the pilots get a
chance to practice on the Liaoning, they have to train at the land-based
facility, the exact location of which hasn't been officially disclosed.
Every pilot will have to pass a series of tests at the site before they'll be cleared for test training at sea.
The training center is set up
to mimick what it will be like to land on the aircraft carrier,
including landing using arresting cables.
Landing and taking off from an aircraft carrier is much different for a pilot than it is from a land-based airport.
As such, over 27-hundred
flights took off and landed at the land-based test site before any
flight testing first began on the Liaoning.
Tian Wei is a squadron leader
at the training base. He says they've made up 10 different manuals to
help the pilots through the nuances of learning how to operate their
jets at sea.
"The follow-up training is
very crucial. For example, a manufacturer makes a gun and shows you how
to load the bullets and how to shoot. However, it requires a lot of
practice if you want to hit the target, and hit it with accuracy. As
such, we drafted a program and manual for our pilots to follow."
The training staff at the facility aren't taking any chances before letting the pilots test on the Liaoning.
The testing facility has been made more difficult to land on than it will be on the Liaoning.
There is only one arresting cable across the landing zone.
The aircraft carrier has 4 cables which the pilots can hit to allow them to stop.
Zhou Chunshan is the deputy commander of the training base.
"Land-based training is
mostly focused on landing practice. Landing is the most difficult thing
for a pilot to do on an aircraft carrier, so accuracy and consistency is
the most important thing for our pilots. We record their landings and
map how well they are progressing."
Authorities running the
land-based training base say they are hoping to make improvements on the
field to give their pilots more practice and training with simulated
aircraft carrier take-offs as well.
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