It of course depends on who you ask, but in general, training for Naval Aviators is more difficult than it is for Air Force pilots. The primary difference is that AF pilots don't have to train to launch and recover from a moving ship in the middle of the ocean in all types of weather, day or night. The analogy is like trying to hit a moving postage stamp in the middle of the ocean. Air Force planes take off and land at fixed-point air bases on solid ground.
He wanted to be a pilot from childhood, he became a navy pilot and flew in the Korean war.
Still trying to find out who the pilot was... The co pilot was Navy officer Robert V.R Ware.
Your Air Force or Navy recruiter would LOVE to advise you on this matter.
He was a Navy pilot. He flew mssions during the Korean War. After that, he went to college and got his degree. Then he became a test pilot.
McHale's Navy
hard he was picked on about his dream to be a pilot
Neil Armstrong was a navy pilot, and took part in the Korean war, he was then chosen as a astronaut, and so became the first man to walk on the moon.He is now retired.
George H. W. Bush won his wings as a navy pilot while was 19.
George H. W. Bush was a navy pilot.
Bush joined the Navy on his 18th birthday, and was accepted as a pilot, making him at that time the youngest pilot in the U.S. Navy...
... and it's rightin 1949
Air Force. The Navy has more Ships.