BOOKS - MILITARY HISTORY - Tiger Check Automating the US Air Force Fighter Pilot in A...
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678555
678555
Tiger Check Automating the US Air Force Fighter Pilot in Air-to-Air Combat, 1950–1980
Author: Steven A. Fino
Year: 2017
Number of pages: 448
Format: PDF
File size: 27 MB
Language: ENG
Year: 2017
Number of pages: 448
Format: PDF
File size: 27 MB
Language: ENG
Spurred by their commanders during the Korean War to be "tigers," aggressive and tenacious American fighter pilots charged headlong into packs of fireball-spewing enemy MiGs, relying on their keen eyesight, piloting finesse, and steady trigger fingers to achieve victory. But by the 1980s, American fighter pilots vanquished their foes by focusing on a four-inch-square cockpit display, manipulating electromagnetic waves, and launching rocket-propelled guided missiles from miles away. In this new era of automated, long-range air combat, can fighter pilots still be considered tigers? Aimed at scholars of technology and airpower aficionados alike, Steven A. Fino’s Tiger Check offers a detailed study of air-to-air combat focusing on three of the US Air Force’s most famed aircraft: the F-86E Sabre, the F-4C Phantom II, and the F-15A Eagle. Fino argues that increasing fire control automation altered what fighter pilots actually did during air-to-air combat.