Shortround6
Major General
I worked in the Navy fighter training world, and I can tell you what they valued far more than technical details was operational experience and observed performance and tactical behaviors. All the instructor pilots and almost all the RIOs had been to Topgun or one of its offshoot training courses, and some of the pilots had flown one of the MiGs they had there.
Cheers,
Wes
In the modern world (post Korea ?) do the planes have G meters? Most pilots had G suits which push the turn performance of the pilot and the plane closer together? That is it doesn't make much sense to build a fighter that could sustain a 7 G turn if the pilot blacked out at 4 1/2.
Modern pilots may have more Hi G training so they can relate what they felt/experienced to the actual numbers.
How did a WW II pilot KNOW if he was blacking (or greying out) at 4 Gs or 5 Gs or some other number if the plane had no G meter to glance at before everything went grey?
Can you download the flight parameters of a training flight for revue later?
As in "at 6' 12" into the engagement Lt. Bob's plane was doing XXXmph and pulling 5 Gs in a YY degree bank at altitude ZZ,000 when he did ...................."
We have much more knowledge of the technical details and flight performance of many opposition aircraft than we had in WW II. Making it easier for operational experience and observed performance to mesh with details and theory.
In WW II the same pilot can turn in "observed performance" of an enemy aircraft a number of days apart, one observation after 7 hours of sleep and good but light breakfast and the other observation after a night of 3 hours sleep (thrown out of the Snorting Swan Pub at closing time) and a rousing breakfast of powdered eggs and bangers.
Which observation report is more accurate?