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#1
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Face it. Dropout % is almost exclusively dependent on selection process. With
perfect selection requirements one would have near zero drop outs. When I went through the NavCad program in the early 50s, one needed to pass a bunch of Navy exams, be physically adequate, and have 2 years college in any major. Admittedly the navy was hungry for pilots at that time, but I suspect the overall dropout % was about 10%. We didn't start out (after 6 months pre flight) in Piper Cubs. We started out in SNJ/T6s -- in which everybody carrier qualified. The advanced *trainer* was the F6 Hellcat -- the hottest thing the Navy had a few years earlier -- and in which the single engine students all carrier qualified. People really don't change, but selection and training procedures surely do -- as they should. Technology is dandy: selection and training are what counts. Quent |
#2
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...but after Pearl was hit the US military couldn't wait for everybody to go
out and get 2 years of college. CTD was used instead. And by the results, it worked just fine. Absolutely. Ask my two of my brothers-in-law. Inefficient, but worked! Quent |
#3
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![]() In WW II there was a depression. Almost nobody had any college at all. The same two years of college were required of aviation cadets as late as 1941, and I think in 1942. I don't know when the requirement was relaxed, but indeed it was. Art is quite right that a very small percentage of high-school graduates had two years of college in the 1930s. I suppose that's one reason the navy had its "Fighting Chiefs" and the army likewise experimented with sergeant-pilots early in the war. (Chuck Yeager got into flying that way. Postwar, he had a devil of a time meeting the education requirements at Wright Field.) I don't think it's ever been remarked, but the fact that almost all of the AVG Flying Tigers had completed two years of college during the Great Depression (Louis Hoffman had been a navy enlisted pilot) likely contributed to their unusual record. They had to be a group of particularly determined men. (Of course the same was true of the army pilots in the Philippines in December 1941.) all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at http://www.danford.net/index.htm Vietnam | Flying Tigers | Pacific War | Brewster Buffalo | Piper Cub |
#4
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QDurham wrote:
...but after Pearl was hit the US military couldn't wait for everybody to go out and get 2 years of college. CTD was used instead. And by the results, it worked just fine. Absolutely. Ask my two of my brothers-in-law. Inefficient, but worked! "CTD"? "Connect the dots"? Help out the laity here, guys. -- Andrew Chaplin SIT MIHI GLADIUS SICUT SANCTO MARTINO (If you're going to e-mail me, you'll have to get "yourfinger." out.) |
#5
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ubject: Re pilot training dropout percentage.
From: Andrew Chaplin Date: 7/14/03 3:51 AM Pacific Daylight Time ...but after Pearl was hit the US military couldn't wait for everybody to go out and get 2 years of college. CTD was used instead. And by the results, it worked just fine. Absolutely. Ask my two of my brothers-in-law. Inefficient, but worked! "CTD"? "Connect the dots"? Help out the laity here, guys. -- Andrew Chaplin CTD was CollegeTraining Detachment. Back then we volunteered for the Army Air Corp cadet program while still in high school If we were acceptede were called up the day we wwre 18 and sent to basic infantry training. We then were sent to a CTD unit. I went to Kent State University in Ohio. There we got intense (very intense) math, physics and earth sciences along with meteorology These were not the usual college courses but were design for what we would need in the aviation program. From there we moved on to classification, then to the various flying schools. I mentioned this in my first post on getting your wings in WW II. . Arthur Kramer Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#6
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![]() "Andrew Chaplin" wrote in message ... QDurham wrote: ...but after Pearl was hit the US military couldn't wait for everybody to go out and get 2 years of college. CTD was used instead. And by the results, it worked just fine. Absolutely. Ask my two of my brothers-in-law. Inefficient, but worked! "CTD"? "Connect the dots"? Help out the laity here, guys. You betcha. College Training Detachment. OK? George Z. |
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