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"A man's got to know his limitations" - Dirty Harry (Magnum Force)On a trip to Polk City to see Kermit's collection, there was a room with five F4U cockpit sections setup as flight simulators. My wife insisted I try the sim but I wanted to see the other exhibits before dark. An employee/volunteer on hand in the room also insisted, so I sat in the seat. Since it was obvious I wasn't being serious about flying the sim, the man insisted that I use the seatbelt and the controls properly. Although I still was thinking about the rest of the displays, I actually tried to fly the Corsair and found a pair of A6Ms about my 11o'clock low and dove on them. There was at least one other A6M out of sight and I was shot down after only 55 seconds.
I think I would enjoy PBY driver duty, pulling fliers out of the drink and turning enemy subs into oil slicks.I did a search to see if this question has been asked before, but not finding it here you go. Reflecting on how the USAAC determined a pilots "qualities" for the type of pilot they would be such as bomber vs fighter, I thought I would ask the forum what assignment do you think you would have, if you were a pilot in WW2?
Personally, I'm pretty sure I would have been assigned to anti-submarine patrol in the Gulf of Mexico/Caribbean, flying something like a Douglas B-18 for the Coast Guard.
My ears are absurdly pressure sensitive, nessessitating constant yawning when climbing, and holding my nose and blowing on descent. Even while sitting in a car driwing uphill or downhill. So I'm probably stuck in a Breda 88 on raise the dust in the desert operations.