ShadowLogan wrote:Never seen Stealth. But it really sounds like Hollywood "looks cool" or the plane in question is connected to manned status (either as an option, or past feature, etc) and not representative of a ground up drone aircraft.
It's about 50%
Macross Plus, and 50%
Top Gun... but nowhere near as good as either. The "EDI" drone does, as you say, have a cockpit, though it's allegedly only there for maintenance purposes and/or emergencies and the craft was a drone design from the ground up. (Personally, I thought the movie was terrible, don't fail to miss it.)
ShadowLogan wrote:I am not saying that Drones aren't used (or can't be), but the uEDF/UEEF does appear to have a preference for manned platforms over drones in all 3 sagas.
A preference for manned platforms is one thing, drones being out of favor is something else entirely.
ShadowLogan wrote:Drones also seem to have fallen out of favor by 2015 in RT, that doesn't mean they stopped using them or developing them, but their role/impact has been scaled back.
Again, I don't think what we see in the show supports that... drones are, if anything, apparently in greater prominence in later sagas. The Garm used by the GMP is an unmanned land unit, and there's evidence of production Alpha drones going back at least as far as 2022. If they fell out of favor, why do we have evidence of decades of drone development which culminated in a fully autonomous variable drone?
ShadowLogan wrote:Your reply makes no sense. If the "Wraith" project did start out as a pure non-variable drone, its frame would have to be changed to make room for a human pilot.
Depends on the size of the AI module and its placement in the airframe. In the context of what's been done OSM-ly, my take would have to be that it's entirely possible that any conversion work done would be minimal, e.g. the manned Ghost from
Macross 7 Trash.
ShadowLogan wrote:A drone can sustain more maneuvering forces than a piloted aircraft, so additional changes are needed to account for the pilot. Then you have to make allowances for the transformation gear.
IF ANY ONLY IF the drone was designed to operate under forces greater than a pilot could withstand.
Macross may have reached that point with drones circa
Macross Plus and the AIF-X-9/QF-X-4000 Ghost, but
Robotech does not appear to have gone that way at all. The most advanced, high-spec drone in all of RT achieved only the exact same performance as a manned fighter.
ShadowLogan wrote:Maxwell's drones don't prove anything about the history of drones in RT. It is an assumption that they started as Drones and are not retro-fitted into drone fighters at a later date [...]
The existence of Alpha drones is explicitly confirmed in the "Shadow Drone" article on the Infopedia, and the episode guide explicitly confirms that Maxwell's planes ARE the aforementioned Alpha drones. It's immaterial whether or not those planes were drones at the time they were built, because VF/A-6 drone units are built around the same chassis as normal, manned VF/A-6 units. It still establishes the ongoing presence and development of drone units, going back to before the UEEF left Earth.
ShadowLogan wrote:I would also add that those fighters are not credited to have an AI according to Maxwell's dialogue, they have nothing more advanced than an Auto-pilot. Which certainly doesn't require it to be treated as an AI.
There are a number of possible explanations for that. Assuming Maxwell's father actually purchased those drones, rather than looting them from somewhere, the AI may not have been installed. If he purchased them legally, it would also go a long way toward explaining why they never fire on the Invid... Maxwell's may be unarmed as well. Maxwell may not be a trained expert on their technology either, so he may believe that the AI and autopilot are synonymous. (Really, we can make word salad out of the dialogue and other material to justify just about anything here.)