USAF Test Pilot School SURVIVOR Patch — Ad Inexplorata, and Back in One Piece
You don't graduate from TPS. You survive it.
The U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base in California's Mojave Desert is where the Air Force's top pilots, navigators, and engineers learn to push aircraft beyond their limits — and write reports about it afterwards. Established on September 9, 1944, as the Flight Test Training Unit at Wright-Patterson AFB, the school moved to Edwards in 1951 to take advantage of uncongested skies, superb flying weather, and a dry lake bed runway that stretches for miles. TPS was created to formalize test pilot training, reduce the staggering accident rate of the 1940s, and increase productive test flights. The 48-week curriculum is legendarily brutal — students fly over 40 different aircraft types, from MiG-15s to B-2 Spirits, logging nearly 2,000 flights per class while simultaneously drowning in data reduction and academic rigor. Thirty-seven graduates from the astronaut-training era were selected for the U.S. space program, and the school's alumni read like a who's who of aerospace history. This "SURVIVOR" patch is the ultimate flex — proof you made it through the gauntlet.
Perfect For: USAF TPS graduates and survivors, Edwards AFB personnel, test pilots across all branches, flight test engineers, and anyone who knows that the most dangerous words in aviation are "let's see what happens."
TPS Survivor — the diploma is nice, but this patch says more.