Definition
A method of flight instruction that deliberately exposes the pilot to the airplane's full range of attitudes (pitch and bank angles) and its full performance envelope (speeds, load factors, and angles of attack), rather than limiting practice to the narrow band of normal cruise, climb, and descent. The intent is to build recognition and recovery skills for unusual attitudes, stalls, and upsets so the pilot can handle the airplane confidently anywhere within its certificated limits.
Plain English
A way of training that takes the pilot beyond ordinary straight-and-level flying so they learn to fly the airplane through steep banks, high and low pitch attitudes, and the slow and fast ends of its speed range. The goal is to be comfortable and capable across the whole range of what the airplane can do.
Context Anchor
Seen in FAA training material about advanced handling, upset prevention and recovery, stalls, and unusual attitudes.
Derivation
"Attitude" in aviation means the airplane's orientation in pitch and bank — not mood. "Envelope" comes from engineering, where a performance envelope is the boundary that contains all the conditions an aircraft is designed to operate within. "All-attitude/all-envelope" simply means training that covers every orientation and every part of that performance boundary, not just the easy middle.
Why Pilots Care
Develops the skills needed to prevent or recover from loss-of-control events that remain a leading cause of fatal accidents.
Intuition Check
Attitude does not mean mood here; it means the airplane’s position in the sky. Envelope does not mean a paper cover; it means the range of safe conditions the airplane is allowed to fly in.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor used all-attitude/all-envelope flight training to expose the student to steep banks, nose-high recoveries, and slow flight near the stall.
Example Sentence 2
All-attitude/all-envelope flight training includes spin entries and recoveries to build confidence in handling departures from controlled flight.