Honestly though - I think the Navy is going to find itself training people who aren't ready for modern aircarft. Training people for warfare in modern aircraft in a traininer that uses analog gauges, no electric trim, and no systems management functions seems backwards. Kids need to learn from day one on glass MFD's, GPS, etc.
The principals of power and attitude still apply - but do we have to dumb down our students (and the reputation of our service) by makingthem fly analog gauge aircraft with no autonated systems to manage?
I bet the USCG eventually says "screw this" and lets the AF to their UPT..
Tracom is behind the times. Slow adoption of The Texan II is hurting Naval Aviation big time.
I agree in some respects. Not taking the original delivery of Texans does suck in some respects. The mighty Mentor is basically a "go cart with wings" afterall. But until Whiting or Corpus are truly ready in all respects, it is much better for instructors and students alike to train the the T-34.
Ending split field ops at Whiting and not being able to use all but 2 OLF's is going to radically change the way business is done right now. Not to mention that the current batch of T-6's are plagued with a few problems that, while not critical, are going to be corrected in the next model, which is what Whiting and Corpus are eventually going to get. The B model is also going to be a true glass cockpit also, with a full MFD suite, not just a couple of gauges thrown on some video screens.
The Navy is taking the right approach by having students take baby steps, first the GPS in primary, then a "semi-glass" cockpit (most of them, anyway) in advanced, then a fully pimped out ride in the fleet. It would be great to start out in a plane with a Death-Star cockpit, FMS, MFD's, and X-Box, but it can also be a big handicap when it is crunch time and you have to go back to the basics and fly needles. It will be nice when we get the Texan, but it isn't critical. I think most of the *****ing from students and IP's is from people who just wanted to fly the new ride in town. Just my 2 cents.