
Primoco UAV Opens Training Centre for Drone Pilots
A training center for a more professional drone sector
Primoco UAV SE, a Czech unmanned aircraft manufacturer, has opened what it says is the first training centre for professional unmanned aircraft pilots in Písek. The move reflects a broader shift in the drone industry: hardware is improving, missions are becoming more demanding, and pilot training is turning into a core part of the ecosystem.
A dedicated centre gives operators a space to develop skills beyond basic takeoff and landing. In professional use, drone pilots need to understand procedures, platform limits, mission logic, and safe operation in controlled and real-world environments. That makes structured training especially relevant for industrial, inspection and specialized applications.
Why this matters
The opening of a dedicated training facility signals that the market is maturing. Drone operations are no longer defined only by the aircraft itself. Ground stations, software, maintenance, and operator readiness all shape whether a mission can be completed reliably.
For manufacturers, training is also a way to support users more closely. A centre like this can help bridge the gap between delivery of the platform and effective use in the field. That is particularly important when the aircraft is intended for professional tasks where consistency and safety matter as much as performance.
What professional training adds
The practical value of such a centre is clear:
- more standardized preparation for pilots;
- better safety awareness during real operations;
- faster adaptation to professional workflows;
- stronger ecosystem support around UAV use.
This is also a reminder that the drone sector is expanding in two directions at once: better aircraft and better infrastructure around them. Training, procedures, and operational discipline are becoming part of the product itself.
Bottom line
Primoco UAV’s new centre in Písek is more than a local announcement. It points to a more established professional UAV market, where pilot education is treated as a necessary layer of the industry, not an optional extra.
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