I worked as an engineer on the US Space Shuttle program, the F-18 program, the F-22 program, the F-35 program, the Rolls-Royce BR710/BR715 engine programs, and NASA's recent SLS rocket program. And the technical people I worked with on all of these projects were hands-down far more capable than Chapman, Duckworth or Newey. In fact, neither Chapman, Duckworth or Newey would last for long in the current aerospace engineering environment, since they don't have the attention to detail the work requires.
Sorry riff-raff but you have just vindicated exactly what I posted.
All the above can only be called success if you consider success as the ability to throw the public's money at a project.
I do not want to insult the obvious ability of yourself and some of the great engineers you have worked with.
However, I doubt many of them can work outside the box.
In 1976 I prepared Range Rover number 6 for a crossing of the Sahara I made with Ginger Baker.
We did the trip in four and a half days.
This trip formed the basis for the first Paris Dakar rally in 1978.
Ginger and I had no back up at all, no super computers, no 787s, no F18s, no raptors and definitely no F35s.
The last would have assured our demise.
In fact on a thread about spatial awareness our achievement and the trillions of wasted public dollars spent on the F35 project should stand as a perfect comparison of human ability bringing success through achievement over others inability to use innovation to achieve anything worth while at all, even with an endless supply of other peoples money.
I am annoyed at your insults directed at people like Chapman and Newey and not because I have met them either.
I am sorry but all the American achievements you list, (including the American led RR projects), were only possible because of other countries past expertise and I think everyone reading this knows it.
I apologise again riff-raff, I have worked with many American engineers with great ability, it is their system that is wrong not them.
Aerospace is today dominated by computers, it is reducing investment and development in many primary engineering disciplines.
Basic new aviation ideas stopped about 50 years ago.
The American and other aircraft systems in service are ideas from that time upgraded with computer application nothing more, you can easily trace back to the original ideas they came from.
It is the same with F1, everything else has been done to death years ago.
I am interested in finding out if it is now possible to overtake human control ability with computers.
Obviously it is with a basic system even google can do it (and I doubt they know much about vehicle development), it is the decision making that we seem unsure about.