Hi Peter,
The various topics you discuss in your post are each a valid item for discussion or debate but I saw logical disconnects in the way you tried to connect them. I think this is why most of your replys took only one topic to respond to rather than the whole post.
The "big" engine debate is a valid topic of discussion unto itself. The question is whether bigger "modern engines" are better than smaller "modern engines" which is the debate question I see bandied about.
My position on this topic is engines and power don't fly your airplane - THRUST flies your airplane and engines and power are just the tools we use to produce the thrust. So, if you have a 40 tuned pipe ship cranking up rpm
and power that is controlled by the pipe that produces "gobs" of thrust or
you have big engine with a bigger prop at slower rpm and produces "gobs" of thrust, in either case these engines produce "gobs" of thrust which is, I think everyone would agree, "a good thing". Either power setup delivers an ability to fly a full size plane in nasty wind and turbulence and survive compared to power systems in the past. Bob Kruger's discussion of energy management that was demanded of those flyers clarifies the difference in power systems from then till now.
It is perfectly valid to debate your preference in how to get that "good thing"
but you then made the leap to flyers from the past and to judging which is unrelated to the big engine discussion. We are talking "apples and oranges"
without a logical connection to the first topic because these gentlemen used 35 size engines that has nothing to do with a debate about "modern engine" size. Then was then and now is now.
As Bill Little said, if you place these gentlemen in the context of their time, and with the power systems they and all their competitors also had at that time then you see that they did not have to be "super-human" they only had to be very good at mastering the power systems they had available and very good at flying the pattern on a given day. No super-human required.
Now, If you want to bring up the topic "Can a superior pilot with inferior equipment beat an inferior pilot with superior equipment", then that is a valid topic for debate all by itself but this topic can be applied to any time era.
However, this point may not necessarily apply to Mr.Lampione and Mr Shaffer
and their contemporaries.
Or perhaps, you could ask how well would Paul Walker perform with the power systems of the bygone era? Well, I guess you would have to look at his performance at the VSC or in classic events for your answers or maybe not, if Paul didn't take classic as seriously as the expert event then results may vary.
Peter, because of the logical disconnect between your two points a person could wander into all sorts of interesting suppositions most of which would probably be wrong.
The other topic you brought "Is judging the same or has it changed?" and again this has nothing, logically, to with a debate on modern engine size.
God I hope judging has changed for the better. The Nats used to be judged by Navy personnel with little knowledge about stunt except for some training.
Since then a lot of people have done a lot of work producing a Judges Guide and conducting judge training sessions at major events and all across the country so the tools for improvement are available now and weren't available in the past. Judges are human and humans aren't perfect so judging will never be perfect but I find people I judge with more into the process of judging and less into pre-judging the expected outcome and assigning points based on the pilot's reputation than happened in the past.
I am not diminishing the excellence of flyers from the past because they would probably have placed well anyway and many of them still do.
Peter, is "judging not changing" a straw-dog you set up just to knock down, because I am not sure how it fits logically. Who is saying judging hasn't changed , that has triggered your response. I guess,it would be better to ask
what is the " objective reality"about the overall state of judging rather an opinion about judging. The bottom line , is that the state of judging is a perfectly valid topic for discussion and debate but I see no logical connection to a big engine debate.
Peter, you give either-or conclusions that don't really hold up to examination because of logical disconnects and because you leave out a lot of other "real world" possibilities and factors you did not mention.
The biggest problem is I am left uncertain about your position on your topics.
I think you prefer smaller modern engines or you are against big engines , I am not sure.
I think you believe judging has changed but I am not sure.
Beyond that,I am not sure of your point. When I first read your post I was confused and it took me a while to figure out why.
I don't do flaming or verbal attacks but you have brought
up perfectly valid topics for discussion and debate but I can't see how they are logically tied together to reach your conclusions.
Peter,tell us your position rather than referencing others as the basis of your discussion. At that point everyone can measure your position against objective reality as they perceive it and get a clearer understanding.
I am not sure what a steriod using Mr, Bonds has to do with big engines , either but I am going to just let that one slide and wish you a good day, Peter.
Pat Robinson