Charles Edward
Member
I understand that the 8 year minimum service commitment (MSC) clock for a naval aviator begins as one is winged.
However, at what point in the training pipelines does one receive their wings?
According to the information in the link below, there are 2 weeks of Introductory Flight Screening (IFS), followed by 6 weeks of
Aviation Preflight Indoctrination (API), and 24 weeks of Primary Flight Training. Then, assuming that one is selected for jets, it is approximately another 27 weeks after primary for intermediate training, and then finally, another 23 weeks for advanced/
At what point in this approximately 82 weeks of training does one receive their wings and the 8 years MSC begins to kick in, please?
Thanks.
However, at what point in the training pipelines does one receive their wings?
According to the information in the link below, there are 2 weeks of Introductory Flight Screening (IFS), followed by 6 weeks of
Aviation Preflight Indoctrination (API), and 24 weeks of Primary Flight Training. Then, assuming that one is selected for jets, it is approximately another 27 weeks after primary for intermediate training, and then finally, another 23 weeks for advanced/
At what point in this approximately 82 weeks of training does one receive their wings and the 8 years MSC begins to kick in, please?
Thanks.
United States Naval Aviator - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org