Yeah. There are plenty of stories of F/A/FA-XX pilots who couldn't make the transition- some have to to with the fact that you have to be very far ahead of this airplane- it's too slow and there are no options that will get the airplane there quickly or to make up lost time. You're either always in the position you need to be in or you're going to be well behind. And you're a slave to the airplane logic.Rambling...we trained up a cadre of drone pilots a bunch of years ago, sending them to the USAF MQ1 pipeline. We had some failures...and they were all single anchors. Couldn't mentally visualize they plane operating in space without their derriere in the seat.
An awful lot of the block & tackle work of drone ops can be gained by operating the smaller Part 107-sized drones. Plan the flight, fly the plan, good briefs, WX, etc. Aviate, navigate, navigate, communicate. Signing for the plane. You also get to crash some and if disciplined, do investigations. I wonder if mixing that into the pipeline wouldn't have value. You could literally get someone a thousand hours flight time in a year hand-flying, first person video, GCS ops, night over the horizon and so on.
Just spitballing...
I have always thought, and still think, that group 3 UAS, like the RQ-21 or RQ-7, would be a great RPA/UAC/UAS Advanced trainer airplane.
That is exactly what the Navy might think right now.
Yeah. It doesn't surprise me. But it concerns me.
Speaking as an NFO who has about 800 hours G4/5 UAC time (and no Class A’s!) it can be done.
That being said, I am a huge foe of the idea that sim time is as good as live time for UAS training. Live training in manned aircraft and flying unmanned is absolutely necessary if you want operators who are in any way proficient, not just “trained in procedures.”Those are two different things in UAS just as they are in a manned aircraft.
Yeah, but you're not an NFO right out of Primary. Your beard is a bit grey...

We're on the same page.