What Ive been trying to tell people in the CFI Forum here for a long time. There's "need to know" information, and there's "nice to know" information.
To be fair, there is a huge segment of the pilot population that has never had to fly an airplane AND use it as a weapon. They don't know what kind of knowledge and mental intensity it takes in and of itself to employ an aircraft as a weapon, so it's simply outside their sphere of understanding why a pilot wouldn't need/want to know that ultra-techy "I read it in the
Aerodynamics For Naval Aviators book" stuff.
I found this to be one of the biggest stumbling blocks for new students in IFF. They were nearly always quite able to handle the demands of jockeying the T-38 safely from point A to B, perhaps in formation, and perhaps at low level. Once you started throwing in having to do all that,
AND:
- know your own tactics
- know the bandit tactics
- know how your own weapons work and are employed
- know how the bandit's weapons work and are employed,
...and then having to actually EXECUTE your own tactics and weapons employment while dynamically responding in real time to bandit weapons and tactics (and all under the physiological strains of G forces)....well, that was an entirely new level of mental concentration that they'd never had demanded of them before.
I've seen some incredibly smart and talented young aviators come through that program as students and not be able to hang with all those demands. My bet is that many of the civilian pilots on this board would be surprised at the knowledge level required on the ground (like having to know how the AMRAAM works at the very same detail level that you have to know how your own airplane works), plus the difficulty intensity of applying that knowledge in flight. I also bet that those same folks might think differently if they experienced some of that.
I've rather enjoyed (in a somewhat sadistic way) teaching people to both fly and fight with the T-38 for exactly these reasons. The T-38 is a fantastic trainer in that regard -- an equal-opportunity embarrasser!