astixjr wrote:
I'm not sure where this post goes so if we need to move it, that's fine.
I'm just curious if there is any correlation between the most successful fighter pilots (trained in North America) during WWII and the type of primary training plane they flew? I suspect there were more Stearmans used than any other type of PT (both Navy and AAF) so from a shear numbers standpoint, the Stearman would probably win. But could somebody say, for example, that fighter pilots who trained in N3Ns scored more air to air victories on average than guys who trained in any other type of PT?
This is question is based on a "bar bet" so it's important that I try to get the facts correct and be able to back them up.
I've been training pilots to fly high performance airplanes all through my tenure in aviation. If asked, I would say that the type of trainer used to train the fighter pilots in WW2 had little to do with the eventual success rate of these pilots in combat.
Every pilot who obtained wings during this period went through their service's respective training programs, many flying the same type of training planes.
Going through post PT and through what would have been in their day fighter lead in, each pilot again got the same indoctrination to the basics involved with combat flying.
Entering combat, or ANY post training operational environment, pilots begin to develop the ATTITUDES and HABIT PATTERNS they will carry with them into this environment. To quote a famous German ace of that period, "In combat, there are those who hunt and those who are hunted. To survive, one must HUNT!.
So the bottom line on the "aces" is that every one of them was in that "hunter" category. This type of personality that led not only to survival, but high kill numbers is what set these pilots apart from the rest, not the type of training planes they flew during their training.