1. The aircraft is DESIGNED for 2 pilots.
2. Jets have ejection seats.
3. Why make it that much more complicated/unsafe?
4. I've flown the P-3 single seat. By single seat I mean a barely qualified FE and 2 true No-Ps (as in 8 hours in type, 6 basic procedural sims), at night, ASW prosecution, 200 feet (foreign), with a nugget TACCO and NAV. It sucked ass. I had to do everything, and after 12 hours which ended in a max crosswind night approach to mins at one of the most notorious fields in South America, I was exhausted. Absolutely an unsafe situation that I accepted due to operational requirement.
I've also done 13 hour real deal burners with another experienced guy, and that sucked almost as much, even able to swap the controls.
Are those cases the norm? Not at all, but why establish a system where the potential to be thrown into them exists?
By your logic, why don't the airlines fly single seat? Hell, "all they do" is take off, A to B, and land.
For that matter, why can't a -53 fly truly single piloted?
What about a COD?
The better question is, "we have the mechanisms necessary to avoid doing it, why would we?" Fuck macho, I like living and taking every reasonable measure to assure the safety of my crew and aircraft.
I already know I'm not going to change your mind. I also know nothing is going to change regarding this scenario.
Again this is the same argument.. I actually agree with you. I’m just participating in the discussion but it makes sense to me that if the Brits have been able to do it safely why couldn’t we. The 53 is no more difficult to fly then 60s and I would imagine no more difficult then the Merlin. The tow mission is demanding as I'm sure ASW is. I really don’t know much about P3s... apparently the mission definitively requires two pilots.. good thing there’s no shortage of P3 bubbas.
