Definition
An FAA facility located in Atlantic City, New Jersey, that serves as the agency's primary research, development, test, and evaluation center for the National Airspace System. It is also the official source for verifying current FAA-approved instrument flight procedures, charts, and related aeronautical data.
Plain English
It is the FAA's main testing and research site, and the place pilots and operators can contact to confirm that an instrument procedure or chart is current and officially approved.
Context Anchor
You may see this name in FAA handbooks, reports, or safety material when the FAA is referring to research or testing that supports aviation procedures, equipment, or standards.
Derivation
Named after William J. Hughes, a U.S. Congressman from New Jersey who supported funding and development of the facility. Knowing the name is a person's name (not a technical term) prevents readers from looking for hidden meaning in the words.
Why Pilots Care
When there is doubt about whether an instrument procedure, chart, or piece of FAA data is current, the Technical Center is the official place to verify it. Flying an outdated procedure can be both unsafe and a regulatory violation.
Intuition Check
Do not read “Technical Center” as a place where pilots go for normal flight training. Here it means an FAA research and testing facility.
Example Sentence 1
The operator contacted the William J. Hughes Technical Center to confirm that the revised RNAV approach was officially published and current.
Example Sentence 2
FAA publications sometimes cite evaluations performed at the William J. Hughes Technical Center for instrument procedure approvals.