Air Electronics brevet neck Tie
The secretary of CXX squadron Association (soon to be an active squadron again at R.A.F. Lossiemouth) is ordering silk Air Electronic Brevet ties. There are plenty of the other Brevets on ties but, seemingly, no AE Brevet .
The order will be going in a couple of weeks from now, so if you feel like you want one, contact MAEop Tindell (rtd) on [email protected] or me pn [email protected] The price is £20 including VAT , Post and Packing. Thanks , Dave Morton. 5aday e |
It’s a flying badge, a brevet is a diploma certificate and the award of a brevet would be the Pilot/Observer certificate that later came with a flying badge. We have been getting this muddled for 100 years - blame the French, it’s our worst habit!
This is what Wg Cdr ‘Jeff’ Jefford, the RAF Historical Society’s leading expert on flying badges, wrote about it: FLYING BADGE OR BREVET? From the mid-19th Century onwards the British Army used the term ‘brevet’ to indicate accelerated, but unpaid, promotion in recognition of particularly notable service (as in a captain becoming a brevet major). A brevet – French for a certificate or diploma – was actually the document authorising such an advance. Its use in the context of aviation arose because pilots were certified by their national branch of the Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI). A number of early British aviators learned to fly at French schools where they gained certificates issued by l’Aero Club de France which proclaimed that they ‘été breveté pilote-aviateur’. In 1910 the Royal Aero Club began issuing similar certificates but the British version was bi-lingual in English and French and it became common practice to refer to the document, which all British pilots (including, until mid-1916, all military pilots) were required to obtain, as a brevet and its use soon became commonplace. QRs get it right by calling them Flying Badges and QR206 is the current highest level document instigating their use: 206. Flying Badges -Wearing of. (1) Flying badges are divided into two categories, those in current issue, for which aircrew are qualified under the terms of paras J727 and 728 and those no longer issued, for which members of the RAF qualified under regulations in force from time to time. These badges are: (a) Pilot Current issued: Weapons Systems Officer (WSO) Weapons Systems Operator (WSOp) Fighter Controller (FC) Airborne Technician (AT) The Preliminary Flying Badge (Pilot), UAS personnel only. See para 728. (b) Previously in issue: Navigator(N) Air Electronics Officer(AE) Air Electronics Operator(AE) Air Engineer(E) Air Signaller(S) Air Loadmaster(LM) Air Observer (O) Air Bomber (B) Wireless Operator (air) (S) Wireless Operator Mechanic (air) (S) Meteorological Air Observer (M) Observer (radio) (RO) Air Gunner (AG) The Preliminary Flying Badge (Pilot) The Preliminary Flying Badge (Navigator) The Preliminary Flying Badge (Signaller) The Preliminary Flying Badge (Engineer) The Preliminary Flying Badge (Gunner) |
Interestingly sometimes MOD call the rear crew wing a 'brevet' (or at least they did in 2012 when I last posted this :))
Quote: Qualification Badges 0712. Flying & Parachute Badges. This section deals with those flying badges (QR J727 & 728) and Parachute badges (QR 434 – 436) currently in issue BADGE DESCRIPTION Pilot. Wings of drab silk embroidery with monogram 'RAF' in centre, surrounded by laurel leaf of brown silk and surmounted by a crown – on dark blue melton cloth. Navigator. The letter 'N' of drab silk surrounded by a laurel leaf of brown silk with an outspread drab silk wing 2½" (6.35 cm) long – on dark blue melton cloth. Air Electronics Officer ] or Operator (AE) ] As for Navigator, but with alternative letters, in brackets. (See Note) Air Engineer (E) ] Air Loadmaster (LM) ] Note. With effect 1 Apr 03 the range of 5 aircrew brevets for rear crew personnel were replaced by the single rear crew brevet (see below). Those aircrew who were already qualified to wear old style individual brevets can opt to wear the new brevet or retain the old style but there will be no further provisioning of the current brevet. Rear Aircrew Brevet. The monogram ‘RAF’ in drab silk surrounded by a laurel leaf of brown silk, surmounted by a crown with an outspread drab silk wing 2½" (6.35 cm) long – on dark blue melton cloth. Introduced 1 Apr 03 to replace Navigator, Air Electronics Officer/Operator, Air Engineer and Air Loadmaster. (See Note Above). Fighter Controller (FC). The letters ‘FC’ of drab silk surrounded by a laurel leaf of brown silk with an outspread drab silk wing 2½" (6.35 cm) long – on dark blue melton cloth. Airborne Technician (AT). The letters ‘AT’ of drab silk surrounded by a laurel leaf of brown silk with an outspread drab silk wing 2½" (6.35 cm) long – on dark blue melton cloth. |
Lima Juliet
Dolphin 125 (AL1 1975 HMS BLAKE) In pedantry versus semantics, semantics wins in this case. The term "brevet" has applied since before the RAF was formed. |
"I thought that FC Brevet was an Italian football team" was the comment by a reporter at the award of the first one at Lossiemouth in the early 1980s.
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If you build it , they will come.
It matters not as far as I am concerned. If it matters to you , then feel free and substitute Flying Badge for every time I mentioned Brevet in the first opening mail. At different times in my career I had an AE brevet and five different Pilots brevets and now I'm fully retired, I don't give a diddly sqwat as to what you call them. The AE brevet was the only one I had to work hard for so the tie will mean something to me. The rest were a breeze. David Morton aka 5aday |
Thank you BGG. Much appreciated.
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Airborne Image Analyst
So are the Sentinel AIAs wearing illegal flying badges?
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Pass. I have no idea what they wear and no idea what their background trades are.
This is diverting away from Neck ties with AE depicted on them. |
Aaaaah! Dave, Pprune at its best.....
......name any subject on earth and there are those who will turn it into a discussion of how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. 16th century Jesuits are mere beginners in comparison.
However as one so entitled - where can I get one and who do I send the spondoolicks to? The Ancient Mariner |
Cost is flat fee of £20 regardless of wether I am posting to you, hand delivering or you’re picking up. Keeps it simple and squeezes a little more towards the charity. Postage to UK addresses only. If you want one posted overseas, drop me a PM and I’ll get a postage price.
Procedure as follows please. Pay £20 via BACS to (email me David Morton - on [email protected]) Make your ref your surname and AE Tie. WHEN YOU HAVE PAID please send me a PM stating wether you want a Standard Tie or an XL Tie (longer for gentlemen of the fuller figure). And add your address if you want it posted or state collect if you want to pick up in Elgin. Once the payments are all in, I will place the order. They say 6-8 weeks. . MAEop Daz Tindall (rtd) at [email protected] |
Got to get me one of them...
Thanks Daz, both for thinking of us all, and for your forebearance with other postings ;) E-mail and BACS en-route
Cheers DS |
There are plenty of the other Brevets on ties but, seemingly, no AE Brevet |
Originally Posted by TwoTunnels
(Post 10085688)
So are the Sentinel AIAs wearing illegal flying badges?
As for the Flying Badge debate, it always reminds me of people who call aircraft or aeroplanes - “planes”. One of my early instructors did their bestto drill that out of me with “Planes? They’re for wood or where the rain falls in Spain...”. The Queen’s, or previously King’s, Regulations are the de facto source for the naming of these as Flying Badges. APs are notoriously wrong, for example they state Airborne Imagery Analyst for an IA in AP3376, when it is Airborne Image Analyst. However, ask anyone on V(AC) Sqn and it is Airborne Image Analyst. :ok: |
Nice one Daz, sounds good.
Any chance of a piccy or at least a description of colour etc? |
As yet, Daz is not on PPRUNE and I am relaying for him. His email is [email protected]. They are the standard colours of RAF ties plus the AE BREVET
(call it what you will !!!) woven into the silk tie. Disregard any previous discussion about it not being a BREVET and appparently it has been that way for at least a hundred years - AND - our current queen, Queen Elizabth ll sanctioned the AE Brevet in the mid 50's. None of the other BREVET's subsequent to that date have been sanctioned (blessed? ) so they could even be illegal. (Station Commanders take note and there may be a relevant order in QR's about illegal adornments on uniforms.) |
5aday
You may find the following pictures of interest - these are copies of the actual HM Queen’s Order. Note the use of the word ‘Flying Badge’ throughout. I hope that clears it all up and good luck with the tie :ok: http://i67.tinypic.com/20fzxok.jpg http://i67.tinypic.com/ivzkeh.jpg |
How amazing. Do you think they made a mistake by not calling it a Brevet? (A joke !!)
Thank you so much for this. I doubt the people on the Sentinel aeroplane ever conformed to that which was requested to H.M. ie the the radio in the Vulcan or instructing the Siggies in Coastal. But it doesn't really matter. Every body has a common i/d and likewise a common enemy. David M 5aday |
Do you think they made a mistake by not calling it a Brevet? (A joke !!) (Trying to fill up maximum wordage for a post) |
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