So further to learning to use flying machines,
A US Army National Guard Sergeant First Class (E7), equivalent to a Canadian WO, with a tablet was flying a UH-70 remotely after an hour of training. (See above).
Meanwhile the US Army is trying to improve the training of their helicopter pilots by adopting civilian models
Flight School Next will draw on industry expertise to prepare helicopter pilots for real-world situations.
breakingdefense.com
Why?
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At the other end of the spectrum we have Ukrainians flying FPV drones
"Right now, it’s harder to train a pilot from scratch, especially if they don’t have any experience with radios, engineering or related technical fields. In general, it takes at least three months to train the pilots from scratch to the beginner level.
"When we talk about pilots, it’s worth mentioning that they also need to be a bit like engineers – if we talk about FPV drones. When you are in position, you have to understand how the system works. If something goes wrong, you should be able to repair it; if the drone crashes, you need to figure out how to make it fly again. So piloting skills are important, but it’s equally important to have some engineering knowledge as well."
Unmanned FPV motherships are on the rise, as operators face an intense cat-and-mouse game on frequency jamming and exploiting momentary vulnerabilities.
www.defensenews.com
Back in WW1 and WW2 the person that drove a vehicle was a "Driver-Mechanic". Teenage Princess Elizabeth of the ATS was expected to be able to fix her vehicle as well as drive it.
Helicopter pilots and Army Sergeants aren't expected to repair their helicopters.
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Maybe, rather than training pilots the army should be training mechanics and let them use the Sergeant's tablet, either while riding or on the ground. But they also need to be comms techs and EW operators.