GregP
Major
The survival of American pilots and the death of the Japanese pilots may very well be due more to WHEN in the war you are talking about, and in what situations they fought. Right about the introduction of the F6F and, slightly later, the F4U, the US Navy was coming into a superiority situation. Earlier, when we encountered superior Japanese forces, we had to run beacuse we needed to preserve our ships that were still there after Pearl Harbor. Later, were essentiall hunting the Japanese Navy, and THEY had to run to survive.
Perhaps in these encounters you mention above, there were American ships around and our pilots mostly all had radios, so we would be looking for them if they called out for help. Conversely, the Japanese fleet might be running to survive and not have ships or other craft to rescue their pilots, who were largely considered "expendable."
Not saying it was that way for everyone. I'm saying it started to be that way about mid-1943 or thereabouts, and COULD have been a factor in a pilot's survival or lack thereof.
I'm not too sure about 5 - 10% estimates in your points above. Sounds like a SWAG, without any way to verify if it's even in the ballpark. I also doubt anyone was memorizing tail numbers in aerial combat. They were trying to attack and not get killed rather than flying around gathering intelligence. But, repeated exposure might very well result in familiarity, though more than a few encounters with the same aircraft would mean the pilots were very well-matched. I don't believe that happened too often.
Perhaps in these encounters you mention above, there were American ships around and our pilots mostly all had radios, so we would be looking for them if they called out for help. Conversely, the Japanese fleet might be running to survive and not have ships or other craft to rescue their pilots, who were largely considered "expendable."
Not saying it was that way for everyone. I'm saying it started to be that way about mid-1943 or thereabouts, and COULD have been a factor in a pilot's survival or lack thereof.
I'm not too sure about 5 - 10% estimates in your points above. Sounds like a SWAG, without any way to verify if it's even in the ballpark. I also doubt anyone was memorizing tail numbers in aerial combat. They were trying to attack and not get killed rather than flying around gathering intelligence. But, repeated exposure might very well result in familiarity, though more than a few encounters with the same aircraft would mean the pilots were very well-matched. I don't believe that happened too often.