Test Pilot Literature

Test Pilot School Textbooks

We have compiled a list of some test pilot school textbooks, which are in the public domain. The teaching materials of the National Test Pilot School (NTPS) are not available for purchase separately, unless you take their courses, but some of the textbooks of other internationally recognized test pilot schools are.

Unites States Air Force Test Pilot School (USAF TPS)

Some older textbooks from the USAF TPS are in the public domain:

  • USAF TPS Textbook, Volume 2: Flying Qualities Textbook (1988-1991) (similar to the above, but one file per chapter and some typos fixed):
  • USAF TPS Textbook, Volume 3: Systems Phase (1983-1996) (one file per chapter):

Chapter 1: Introduction to Systems Testing, September 1990:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320041.pdf
Chapter 2: Navigation Systems, March 1988:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320040.pdf
Chapter 2A: Satellite Navigation Using the Global Positioning System, January 1996:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320039.pdf
Chapter 3: Human Factors, June 1983:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320038.pdf
Chapter 4: Radar Systems, January 1992:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320037.pdf
Chapter 5: Electro-Optical Systems, June 1995:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320036.pdf
Chapter 6: Electronic Combat Systems, March 1989:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320035.pdf
Chapter 6A: Electronic Warfare/Radar Handbook, January 1990:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320034.pdf
Chapter 6B: ECM and ECCM Workbook, January 1987:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320033.pdf
Chapter 7: Integrated Avionics Systems, September 1985:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320032.pdf
Chapter 8: Stores Certification, March 1991:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320031.pdf
Chapter 9: ??? (apparently missing)
Chapter 10: Aeroelasticity/Aircraft Structures, November 1990:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320030.pdf
Chapter 10A: Structures Flight Test Handbook, November 1990:
https://apps.dtic.mil/sti/pdfs/ADA320029.pdf

United States Naval Test Pilot School (USNTPS)

Some of the USNTPS Flight Test Manuals are in the public domain, and can be retrieved from the document library on the website of the US Naval Test Pilot School Alumni Association at http://www.usntpsalumni.com/document-library

United States Naval Test Pilot School Flight Test Manuals:

Reference Handbooks

NATO Research & Technology Organization (RTO) AGARDograph Series

More references to volumes of the different AGARDograph series will be posted as time allows. The above volume focuses on the non-mathematical and managerial aspects of flight test engineering, as opposed to the test pilot school textbook references further above, which are mostly physics, mathematics, and flight test method oriented.

Flight Test Engineering Textbooks

  • Donald T. Ward, Thomas W. Strganac, Rob Niewoehner, ”Introduction to Flight Test Engineering,” Volume 1, 3rd Edition, Kendall/Hunt Publishing, 2006. ISBN 9780757529344.
    (The first and second editions were a single-volume book only by the first two authors.)
  • Donald T. Ward, Thomas W. Strganac, Rob Niewoehner, ”Introduction to Flight Test Engineering,” Volume 2, 1st Edition, Kendall/Hunt Publishing, 2007. ISBN 9780757551512.
  • Ralph D. Kimberlin, “Flight Testing of Fixed-Wing Aircraft,” AIAA Education Series, 2003. ISBN-13 978-1563475641, ISBN-10 1563475642.
  • James W. Gregory, Tianshu Liu, “Introduction to Flight Testing,” John Wiley & Sons, 2021. ISBN 978-1-118-94982-5.
  • Darrol Stinton, “Flying Qualities and Flight Testing of the Airplane”, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astonautics (AIAA) & Blackwell Sciences Ltd., Reston and Oxford, 1996. ISBN 1-56347-274-0 (paper).
  • Robert E. McShea, “Test and Evaluation of Avionics and Aircraft Weapons Systems”, 2nd Edition, SciTech Publishing, Edison, NJ, 2014. ISBN 978-1-61353-176-1 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-61353-180-8 (PDF).

Flight Test Standards and Guides

This literature covers the regulations (civilian and military), which specify what performance and flying qualities are considered acceptable and must be met by newly designed aircraft, as well as verified in flight tests before certification. They are of importance not only for engineers and test pilots, but also for pilots in general, because pilots should know what the airplane they fly has been designed to do.

The documents listed are just a small selection and at times this list contains obsolete documents, where of interest.

Civilian

Regulations:

Suggested Means of Compliance:

Part 23:

Ultralight and Amateur-Built:

AOPA Article for General Aviation Pilots on Performance-Based Rewrite of 14 CFR Part 23:

Military

Military Specifications:

Guides:

Rating Scales

Closed Loop Handling Qualities (CLHQ)

Cooper-Harper Rating Scale

Workload

Bedford Rating Scale

NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX)

Test Pilot Schools

Links to a few internationally recognized test pilot schools, and selected pages on their websites (for a full list of all schools, see this Wikipedia page):

Flight Testing and Airplane Development Related Organizations

Practical Applications of Test Pilot Literature

These are advanced books for normal pilots, which are inspired by and derived from the results presented in test pilot literature. Mostly, only the description in words and some of the figures have been retained, with perhaps an occasional equation every now and then. For a derivation, in order to understand truly where things are coming from, one really needs to fall back on the highly technical literature above. However, the following books do offer practical applications of this theory, relevant for the pilot in everyday and emergency situations (whereas in the above works from USAF TPS and USNTPS discussions of flight are mostly focused on carefully setting up well controlled flight tests to measure a certain quantity in flight).

Reading Order Suggestions

Reading materials in the proper order and suitable for your background knowledge is key to understanding. We strongly recommend you give the USAF TPS Textbooks a try first. They are self-contained and pedagogically excellently written, and easily understood if you have the appropriate mathematical background. They also have several introductory chapters on all the math needed. Do not be deceived by their somewhat antiquated typesetting appearance, the core content has not changed fundamentally since 1986 (but beware of numerous typos, which have been fixed in newer versions).

You may then proceed to read the USNTPS Flight Test Manuals, which contain additional information or a different view angle in many instances. However, they are not written in a self-contained fashion and not really intelligible as a standalone source of study. 

If you want to avoid all the math and/or are interested in practical applications to everyday flight and in particular upset prevention and recovery (UPRT), we recommend you start with (or read afterwards) Bill Crawford’s Flightlab course notes. You will get the main ideas, though you will sacrifice any derivations and proper understanding where all of this is coming from if you have skipped all the math.

Finally, H.H. Hurt’s “Aerodynamics for Naval Aviators” is a highly popular book even among civilian pilots, and in fact even listed by the FAA on its website among their handbooks. It is another work almost completely devoid of calculations and contains only occasional formulas, but goes much deeper than standard FAA training literature, and you will find it to contain a number of concepts and figures from test pilot school literature.