Student pilots soar to 35,000 feet, never leave ground

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. Austin M. May
  • 47th FTW public affairs
The pressurized cockpits of Laughlin's three training aircraft keep student and instructor pilots comfortable while flying at altitudes several thousand feet in the air.

In the unlikely event that something should go wrong and the aircraft would lose pressure, the pilots must be able to recognize the effects and know how to safely put the aircraft back on the ground.

At the 47th Aeromedical Dental Squadron's Aerospace Physiology training flight, students take a simulated flight to 35,000 feet without ever leaving the ground in the massive altitude chamber.

While in the chamber, students are taught to recognize the signs of hypoxia, a condition that occurs when not enough oxygen is delivered to the brain, said 1st Lt. Sharon Beuscher, Human Performance Training Team element chief. 

The symptoms of hypoxia vary from person to person, so it is vital to the safety of flight that students be able to recognize their symptoms in a safe environment where they can be monitored by trained experts and no lives are at stake, the lieutenant said.