As much as I respect the opinions of individuals who've served in the military and especially in this case given the relevance of previous naval positions and the topic we're discussing.... this is more of a question for physicists and engineers to study and simulate, and I'm doubtful as to just how useful service experience even aboard a CVN is for the question of ski jumps. I'd absolutely be interested to how Kwaig formed his opinion though, especially if his previous experience is informing his opinion.
Don't get me wrong, I'm sure a ski jump absolutely confers some deficits to the kind of planes that can be launched from it relative to a catapult, but I'm just wondering why the line is so specifically drawn at fighters with heavy loads. I think it would be fairer to say that certain aircraft with particular aerodynamic configurations, thrust/weight ratios, would be unable to launch... and that maybe certain weights would be less reliably launched or launched with a different take off profile compared with a catapult. But what these tidbits are is something that should be investigated and shouldn't be effortlessly tossed out with too much confidence.
Don't get me wrong, I'm sure a ski jump absolutely confers some deficits to the kind of planes that can be launched from it relative to a catapult, but I'm just wondering why the line is so specifically drawn at fighters with heavy loads. I think it would be fairer to say that certain aircraft with particular aerodynamic configurations, thrust/weight ratios, would be unable to launch... and that maybe certain weights would be less reliably launched or launched with a different take off profile compared with a catapult. But what these tidbits are is something that should be investigated and shouldn't be effortlessly tossed out with too much confidence.