old iron wrote:
Quote:
But in that state of the war, I would guess the Japanese pilots were probably superior to the Russians.
While in our hypothetical F3F/IJN combat, they pilots would have been more comparable.
I would argue that, yes, the Japanese pilots were initially superior to the Russians, but were also initially superior to our own, ....
The Russians faced the IJA, the Americans et allii the IJN. Given the antagonism between the two Japanese forces, you may as well compare different nations.
That said, the IJA got a dose of pilot attrition in the fevered pace of operations at Khalkin Gol/Nahomon. Following that, however they faced more limited operations, and could keep up with pilot needs. The IJN either didn't get the memo, or ignored it as an Army problem, and seemed not to even attempt any effort to replace, retrain or supplement their carrier pilot base from the start of the war.
Pilot training cannot be overemphasized. The Poles had extremely well trained pilots in obsolete aircraft *, that performed most excellently when given modern equipment.
Being able to train pilots in security was a huge advantage to the Americans and Canadians, and to an extent the RAF (there being a former RAF base here in Arizona). The US and Canada had the added luxury of being able to rotate pilots home both for rest and to pass on the practical lessons learned to the new crop.
The Germans after 1941, never had a rear area 'rear' enough for safe training (combined with fuel shortages and the destruction of training aircraft wasted at Stalingrad)
The Russians seemed to treat pilots as fungible goods, part of massive production of aircraft, where quantity was more important than quality. That helped lead to the massively one sided K:D ratios on the eastern front.
*Poland alternated approximately five year periods of training vs rearmament. The rearmament/modernization phase was just starting when the war erupted.