https://medium.com/war-is-boring/the-v-22-is-the-future-d47e08d57e56
I’ve been a military assault support pilot for almost two decades. I’d rather fly into combat in the MV-22B Osprey than any other rotorcraft in the world.
Considering the aircraft’s reputation in some quarters, that statement might be surprising.
The usual critics have always been skeptical of the aircraft, but some of its more vehement critics have been helicopter pilots.
That’s no surprise. Like the Luddites of 19th-century England, people with a stake in current technologies often try to tear down the new techs that could make old systems obsolete.
Before the tank proved itself during the latter days of World War I, many soldiers were skeptical. Prior to that war, horse cavalry was the elite branch in most militaries.
Horses were a proven “technology.” Cavalry had refined their tactics over centuries. How could some mechanized abomination replace them? Early tanks broke down frequently and even endangered their crews. But with development, the tank was able to do things that no other weapon—and certainly no horse—ever could do.
(click on the link to get the full story)
I’ve been a military assault support pilot for almost two decades. I’d rather fly into combat in the MV-22B Osprey than any other rotorcraft in the world.
Considering the aircraft’s reputation in some quarters, that statement might be surprising.
The usual critics have always been skeptical of the aircraft, but some of its more vehement critics have been helicopter pilots.
That’s no surprise. Like the Luddites of 19th-century England, people with a stake in current technologies often try to tear down the new techs that could make old systems obsolete.
Before the tank proved itself during the latter days of World War I, many soldiers were skeptical. Prior to that war, horse cavalry was the elite branch in most militaries.
Horses were a proven “technology.” Cavalry had refined their tactics over centuries. How could some mechanized abomination replace them? Early tanks broke down frequently and even endangered their crews. But with development, the tank was able to do things that no other weapon—and certainly no horse—ever could do.
(click on the link to get the full story)