oldcrowcv63
Tech Sergeant
Good eyesight, good shooting skills and the ability to manoeuvre the aircraft as a gun platform were the main key skills, as well as situational awareness.
Deflection shooting skills were a real asset and it is no surprise when you look at all the aces you find nearly all of them had good shooting skills before they learned to fly.
Good aerobatic and formation flying skills were probably a liability for a fighter pilot, the British Vic formation was hopeless.
You needed to keep the plane moving around all the time in a high risk area, to avoid being bounced and to be able to see more. Stanford Tuck said he used to deliberately fly very roughly and he was a superb pilot.
OS, This is interesting. Reading about the USAAF experience in Java, even the combat vets and those considered ready to begin a combat tour appear to have been rigorously trained to the formation flying model. There seem to have been numerous occasions when an element or flight was tasked with covering their mates while landing or doing ground attack and they were bounced and put away by marauding Zeros. They were presumably engaged in scanning the environment for the enemy so as not to be surprised yet they were and ended up as simply meat on the table for the Zeros.
Thach's weave or beam defense maneuver may have provided more benefits than the mutual lookout and defensive options. Introducing continually changing curved flight paths may have been more confounding to an enemy's targeting and eliminated the inherent vulnerability brought about by a relatively predictable flight pattern. It seems like a tight formation of A/C following either a rectilinear path or a simple steady circle would provide a much simpler enemy firing solution.
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