Ghost Rider wrote:
So are you going to stop wanking to the thought that a pilot who's never had to face problems of a 3-D enviroment, speeds that magnitudes order greater then anything they ever faced and the fact the can shot their nose off with their own guns because they could overcompensate, will just enter and go this a dream come true...because a computer is compensating?
You go "They wouldn't have the deficts of Atmosphereic flight!"...yet we know from AOTC, that there are loads of fucking things that the computers do not compensate. So please keep telling yourself all the pilot needs to do is rely on ol R2.
Flying in atmosphere is a 3D environment, only with a lot more hazzards than open deep space. What makes you think a recruit in the SW universe who has never flown a starfighter - and such have to exist - can be trained to fly a starfighter, but an experienced atmospheric pilot can't be? That a few extra buttons and no ceiling or ground will blow a mind of a proven top notch performer?
Dump a WWII pilot in a B-Wing and dogfight with no prior experience and he probably will shoot himself. On the other hand, so might a Z-98 headhunter pilot in the same circumstances, the only difference being that the WWII pilot might die a little sooner. The threat of running into their own bullets was not an unknown problem to early jet pilots, and a few WWII vets were either still flying by then, or kept up on the latest news. It might be a surprise to an untrained pilot, but not to someone properly trained, as I would expect a transplanted WWII pilot to be in Leia's service.
There are human limits to reaction times and information processing, after which a computer has to cut in to fine tune a pilot's guidance. SW pilots, for example, do not seem to manually adjust each little thruster to change direction and fly on an even keel; a computer therefore must compensate for them. During his trench run, Luke had a targeting computer that was only outmatched by the Force. R2 was directed in general terms to tweak the power and perform repairs, while Luke did the flying.
As a crude comparison, there was a video game that mimicked the real physics of spaceflight as we know it, and you had to fire off each thruster just so to move about, or spin out of control. There was also a 'computer control' option that allowed the player to simply point and steer, at cost of fuel points. SW computers are a little more sophisticated.
The refined systems of SW spacecraft appear to allow them to perform like conventional atmospheric craft. TIE fighters have a control yoke, an control interface common to civillian atmospheric aircraft. All SW fighters even appear to have artificial gravity, a sound system for tactile clues, inertial dampers, and all sorts of reliable pilot-friendly interfaces that allow the main character at a glance to see what is going on. Punch a few coodinates into a navcomp, and the computer, not the pilot, flies the spacecraft when the jump is initiated. There are even force-field protections, so bumping into a small bit of space debris won't damage the spacecraft, while on Earth, a goose hit the wrong way could send a jet fighter to the ground.
There is nothing in the movies or books that would suggest being a WWII ace is a barrier or handicap to being a starfighter pilot, and plenty of evidence to suggest that being a starfighter pilot is no more difficult, and perhaps even less difficult, than flying a spitfire. I am not sure what situations in ATOC you are referring to that a proven pilot from WWII could not be taught to handle.
If you are implying that flying a spitfire is different than, say, flying an apache helicopter, which it is, and plane pilots might not be cost-effective to retrain to a totally different machine and flight concept, which is true given our tech constraints, there are still pilots rated to fly planes and helicopters. A SW starfighter seems not only well developed for a variety of alien capabilities, it comes with the instructional facilites. High-detailed sim chambers mimicking the real thing and proper instruction could get a determined, experienced atmospheric plane pilot up to speed in a matter of months either flying a helicopter like machine, or whatever a starfighter is.
Wait a minute; aren't you a real pilot? And if so, why do you think so poorly of your skills and educational capacity or those of your WWII predecessors?