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No. 5 Elementary Flying Training School RAAF : ウィキペディア英語版
No. 5 Elementary Flying Training School RAAF

No. 5 Elementary Flying Training School (No. 5 EFTS) was a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) pilot training unit that operated during World War II. It was one of twelve elementary flying training schools employed by the RAAF to provide introductory flight instruction to new pilots as part of Australia's contribution to the Empire Air Training Scheme. No. 5 EFTS was established in June 1940 at Narromine, New South Wales, and primarily operated Tiger Moths. It ceased training in June 1944, after more than 3,700 students had passed through.
==History==

Flying instruction in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) underwent major changes after the outbreak of World War II, in response to the commencement of Australia's participation in the Empire Air Training Scheme (EATS). The Air Force's pre-war pilot training facility, No. 1 Flying Training School at RAAF Station Point Cook, Victoria, was supplanted in 1940–41 by twelve elementary flying training schools (EFTS) and eight service flying training schools (SFTS).〔Stephens (2006), pp. 67–70〕〔(Gillison (1962), p. 111 )〕 The EFTS provided a twelve-week introductory flying course to personnel who had graduated from one of the RAAF's initial training schools. Flying training was undertaken in two stages: the first involved four weeks of instruction (including ten hours of flying), which were used to determine trainees' suitability to become pilots. Those that passed this grading process then received a further eight weeks of training (including sixty-five hours of flying) at the EFTS. Pilots who successfully completed this course were posted to an SFTS in either Australia or Canada for the next stage of their instruction as military aviators.〔〔(Gillison (1962), pp. 106–109 )〕
No. 5 Elementary Flying Training School (No. 5 EFTS) was formed at Narromine, New South Wales, on 24 May 1940, and came under the control of Central Area Command, headquartered in Sydney.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 399〕〔Ashworth (2000), p. 34〕 Its inaugural commanding officer was Squadron Leader T.C. Curnow, who was previously in charge of No. 2 Elementary Flying Training School at Archerfield, Queensland.〔RAAF Historical Section (1995), pp. 22–23〕〔RAAF Historical Section (1995), p. 17〕 No. 5 EFTS's airfield had been home to the Narromine Aero Club before being taken over by the RAAF. Twenty de Havilland Tiger Moth training aircraft were flown in from Laverton, Victoria, on 24 June, and flying training commenced three days later when the first forty-six students arrived from No. 1 Initial Training School.〔〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 400〕 Within a month, student numbers had grown to ninety-four, and the school's total strength was 346.〔
As of 30 June 1940, only one of the No. 5 EFTS's four required hangars had been completed.〔 Accommodation facilities were, according to the unit operations book, "bleak and depressing" and deficiencies in equipment were "too numerous for itemising".〔〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), pp. 399, 401〕 The primitive conditions meant that personnel suffered adverse health effects from the cold in winter and hot, dusty conditions in the summer. Flying at Narromine was also hampered by bad weather, particularly heavy rain and wind.〔 Accidents were frequent at all EFTSs, though fatalities were rare. An instructor and his passenger from No. 5 EFTS were killed when a Tiger Moth crashed on 3 August 1940, possibly caused by a stall while practising forced landings.〔〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 416〕 By the end of August, the school was operating one of its two required Link Trainer simulators.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 411〕
As of 30 September 1940, total strength was 467, including 114 trainees.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 419〕 One student died and five others were injured off duty when the balcony of the Federal Hotel in Narromine collapsed on 11 November.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), pp. 444–445〕 An instructor was killed and his pupil injured when their Tiger Moth stalled while attempting to avoid collision with another aircraft on 3 December.〔 Later that month, Squadron Leader Roy King, a fighter ace in the Australian Flying Corps during World War I, took over command of the school, serving until June 1941.〔〔Garrisson, ''Australian Fighter Aces'', p. 93〕 By that time, some 500 pupils had graduated from No. 5 EFTS; the wastage rate was just under twenty per cent.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 505〕 Among the graduates was R.H. (Ron) Middleton, who subsequently flew with the Royal Air Force in Europe and was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for his actions piloting a Short Stirling bomber in November 1942.〔Stephens (2006), pp. 104–106〕〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 465〕
Night-flying training commenced at No. 5 EFTS in July 1941.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 525〕 As of 30 April 1942, the school's strength was 845 personnel, including 319 students, the increase owing to an influx of staff and students from No. 2 EFTS and No. 6 Elementary Flying Training School in Tamworth, New South Wales, both of which had been disbanded in March.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), pp. 577, 583〕〔RAAF Historical Section (1995), pp. 17, 24〕 By July 1943, total strength stood at 748, including thirty-three members of the Women's Auxiliary Australian Air Force (WAAAF); the unit was operating eighty-seven Tiger Moths and one Ryan.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), p. 646〕 In April 1944, WAAAF numbers reached eighty-four out of a total strength of 703; the aircraft complement was eighty-six Tiger Moths, seventy-one of which were serviceable, and two CAC Wacketts, neither serviceable.〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), pp. 667–668〕 No. 48 Course passed out on 15 June 1944, after which training at the school ceased. Three other courses then under way were completed at other EFTSs. By 25 June, all of the school's Tiger Moths had been transferred to other locations. A total of 3,734 students had passed through No. 5 EFTS, 2,850 of whom graduated as pilots.〔〔Royal Australian Air Force (1939–45), pp. 681–684〕

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