heyjoe said:
Totally agree. There's a reason that the Navy opted to put two seat Super Hornets in the Fleet and it wasn't to give pilots a cheering section or "sugar calls". If you think the backseat is nothing more than a cheerleader's job, you need to get out more.
In fairness to Grinch, this bum gouge has been handed out a lot by instructors down in Pensacola (the Prowler types contributed in no small part...)
Grinch-- a lot of half-truths to what you've heard. The bad news is that in the Rhino, the pilot can do everything. It's not the Tomcat or the Phantom, where the pilot lacked the physical capability to work most aspects of the radar... the Rhino was designed as a single-seat plane. That's really where most of this bad gouge originates.
The good news is this has zilch to do with anything. The -18F is doing more different types of missions than anyone else, anywhere. The amount of stuff you're going to have to learn is staggering. Except for a few pure geniuses, it's more than any one dude in one plane will be able to become an expert on.
More to the point, the actual systems are becoming so intricate and numberous, it's something you want two dudes to manipulate. Your grandaddy fighter pilot was an athlete who flew by the seat of his pants... today it's all about working the systems. Even if your one guy CAN work it all... have fun doing it while dodging manpads, talking to a FAC(A), not hitting the ground, acquiring your target, and making your time on target.
Not saying some sh!t-hot single-seater like jarhead or Rainman can't do it... but believe me, you'll be busy...
If you have any other specific questions, feel free to PM me. I guess I'm the only guy representing the Rhino two-anchor mafia here. Scary...
