U.S. Air Force Issue · 21st Century A-2 Z21V41
Cockpit USA USAF A-2
Goatskin Leather Flight Jacket
$21,815.00
The Army Air Corps jacket of 1931, rebuilt to the U.S. Air Force's modern specification — military-spec goatskin, one-piece back, and the pilot-requested updates of the 21st Century A-2. Built by an official U.S. government supplier. Made in the USA.
Fit — Regular Fit · True to Size
The 21st Century A-2 adds room through the chest compared to vintage proportions — order your normal chest size. Size 40 fits a 41–43 inch chest.
Mil-spec goatskin.
2.75 oz chrome-tanned goatskin — the current approved USAF material standard.
Pilot-updated.
One-piece back, hidden side-entry pockets, interior storage — the updates Air Force pilots asked for.
Made in America.
Built in the USA by Cockpit USA — whose A-2 flight jackets the U.S. Air Force itself has bought.

2.75 oz chrome-tanned goatskin · seal brown
The current USAF standard.
Cockpit USA cuts this jacket from 2.75 oz (1.1mm) chrome-tanned goatskin — the current approved USAF material standard.

The Workshop · Since 1975
Part of the A-2's return.
When the A-2 came back for the Air Force's 40th anniversary in 1987, Avirex — today Cockpit USA — was one of the manufacturers still building it. The U.S.A.F. bought its A-2s, and the company became an official government supplier.

The 21st Century A-2, off duty
Fit
True to size. Room to move.
Updated fit adds room through the chest — order your normal chest size. Size 40 fits a 41–43 inch chest.
Measurements
The A-2 Family
Choose your A-2.
USAF A-2
The current-issue configuration
$21,815.00
You’re looking at itBefore you fly.
Is this historically accurate?
It follows the A-2 pattern standardized in 1931, updated to the USAF's modern 21st Century configuration — built by an authorized DoD contractor.
Why goatskin instead of horsehide?
Goatskin is the current approved USAF material standard. Cockpit also makes a Horsehide A-2 in the original 1931 material.
Does it have handwarmer pockets?
Yes — hidden side-entry pockets along the patch-pocket seams, one of the updates Air Force pilots requested.
How does the sizing run?
True to size — the updated fit adds chest room over vintage proportions. Order your normal chest size.
Made in USA?
Yes — by Cockpit USA, an official U.S. government supplier.
Army Air Corps · Specification 94-3040
The jacket of 1931.
Updated by the pilots who wear it.
The Army Air Corps standardized the Type A-2 on 9 May 1931 — a fitted leather flight jacket with a shirt collar, knit cuffs, and a zippered, storm-flapped front. It flew through WWII until it was cancelled in 1943, and returned for the Air Force's 40th anniversary in 1987 — Avirex, today Cockpit USA, was one of the manufacturers still building it to original patterns. The 21st Century A-2 adds the practical updates serving pilots asked for — hidden side-entry pockets, interior storage, and room through the chest — without touching the silhouette.

2.75 oz chrome-tanned goatskin — grain detail at the patch pockets
The Material
Military-spec goatskin.
The current USAF standard.
The original 1931 A-2 was horsehide with a cotton lining. Today the approved standard is goatskin — and Cockpit USA cuts the 21st Century A-2 from 2.75 oz (1.1mm) chrome-tanned military-spec hide.
Inside: a military-spec cotton-blend tonal lining and a US-made brass front zipper under the storm flap.
Construction
Regulation, with the updates pilots asked for.
One-piece back
A clean, seamless back panel — the canvas WWII crews used for nose art.
Storm flap + snap collar
Brass zipper under a storm flap, with the A-2's signature snap-down shirt collar.
Hidden side-entry pockets
Handwarmer entries concealed along the patch-pocket seams — the pilots' request, invisible at a glance.
Vented underarm gussets
Airflow and full shoulder rotation, cockpit or street.
Interior storage
Twin interior chest pockets plus a double-slotted pen pocket.
Box-stitched epaulets
Reinforced shoulder epaulets, stitched to spec.
“Standardized 1931. Retired 1943. Reborn 1987.”
U.S. Army Air Corps specification 94-3040 → USAF 21st Century A-2
The Workshop · Since 1975
Part of the
A-2's return.
When the U.S. Air Force revived the A-2 for its 40th anniversary in 1987, Avirex — today Cockpit USA — was one of the manufacturers still building the jacket to original patterns. The Air Force bought its A-2 flight jackets, and the company became an official U.S. government supplier.
The 21st Century A-2 is that lineage in civilian form: military-spec materials, the same American workshop.

Mil-spec tonal lining and Cockpit USA authenticity label

The 21st Century A-2, off duty
The Details
Spec details, down to the snaps.

Flap snap pockets — hidden side entry along the seam

US-made brass zipper · mil-spec cotton-blend lining
Fit
True to size.
Room where you need it.
The 21st Century pattern adds room through the chest over vintage A-2 proportions — so unlike older mil-spec jackets, you order your normal chest size. Size 40 fits a 41–43 inch chest.
Fit — Regular Fit · True to Size
Order your normal chest size. Layering heavily? The chart's jacket-chest column shows exactly how much room each size gives you.
Full chart with all ten sizes (36–54) in the Size Guide. Jacket chest is the garment measurement; size 40 fits a 41–43 inch body chest.
The A-2 Family
Three A-2s. One pattern.
What Customers Say
Questions
Before you fly.
Is this historically accurate?
It follows the Type A-2 pattern standardized by the Army Air Corps on 9 May 1931 (specification 94-3040), in the USAF's modern 21st Century configuration — built to current military contract specifications by an authorized US Department of Defense contractor.
Why goatskin instead of horsehide?
The original 1931 A-2 was horsehide; goatskin is the current approved USAF material standard. Cockpit also makes a Horsehide A-2 in the original material.
Was the original A-2 silk-lined?
No — that's a documented myth from an erroneous period Type Designation Sheet. Original A-2s were cotton-lined. This one uses a military-spec cotton-blend tonal lining.
Does it have handwarmer pockets?
Yes — hidden side-entry pockets integrated along the patch-pocket seams, one of the practical updates Air Force pilots requested.
How does the sizing run?
True to size. The updated fit adds room through the chest compared to vintage A-2 proportions, so order your normal chest size — no sizing up required.
Made in USA?
Yes — cut and sewn in the USA by Cockpit USA, an official U.S. government supplier.















