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  2. Warrant officer (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warrant_officer_(United...

    The Navy started a Flying Chief Warrant Officer Program in 2006 to acquire additional naval aviators (pilots) and naval flight officers (NFOs), who would fly naval aircraft, but who would not compete with traditional unrestricted line (URL) officers in naval aviation for eventual command of squadrons, air wings, air stations, etc., the numbers ...

  3. Naval aviator (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_aviator_(United_States)

    In the U.S. Navy, most naval aviators are unrestricted line officers (URLs), eligible for command at sea, but a small number of former senior enlisted personnel subsequently commissioned as line limited duty officers and chief warrant officers in the aviation operations technician specialty have also been trained as naval aviators and naval flight officers.

  4. List of United States Naval officer designators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States...

    An officer of the regular Navy whose permanent status is warrant officer or chief warrant officer (note that warrant officer [pay grade W-1] is not currently used in the U.S. Navy; all U.S. Navy warrant officers are commissioned as chief warrant officer-2 [pay grade W-2]; only designator 7840, cyber warrant officer of the line, is coded in ...

  5. Warrant officer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warrant_officer

    Warrant officer (WO) is a rank or category of ranks in the armed forces of many countries. Depending on the country, service, or historical context, warrant officers are sometimes classified as the most junior of the commissioned officer ranks, the most senior of the non-commissioned officer (NCO) ranks, or in a separate category of their own.

  6. Flight officer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_Officer

    The rank of flight officer was re-instituted by the United States Air Force's civilian auxiliary, the Civil Air Patrol (CAP), in the mid-1980s, replacing the former ranks of warrant officer and chief warrant officer, new entrants for which had been eliminated by the Air Force in 1959 and discontinued with the retirement of the last Air Force ...

  7. Aviation Cadet Training Program (USAAF) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aviation_Cadet_Training...

    The warrant officer's bars were worn horizontally on the shoulder straps of the shirt or jacket, like a lieutenant's or captain's bars. Co-pilot Flight Officers – an Air rating – wore brown-enamel ground chief warrant officer insignia when flying. This was so they would not be confused with a pilot flight officer, the plane's commander.

  8. Michael J. Novosel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_J._Novosel

    Novosel retired as the senior warrant officer with the Warrant Officer Candidate Program in 1984. He had been a military aviator for 42 years and was the last World War II military aviator in the U.S. to remain on active flying duty. He accumulated 12,400 military flying hours, including 2,038 in combat.

  9. Chief warrant officer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chief_warrant_officer

    The rank insignia of the CWO is a simplified version of the 1957 coat of arms of Canada, worn on both forearms of the service dress tunic; in gold metal and green enamel miniature pins on the collar of the service dress shirt and outerwear coats (army only); on CADPAT ranks worn in the middle of the chest, embroidered in tan (army) or blue (air force) thread; and in pearl-grey thread on blue ...