If you're forced to proceed farther because of your velocity then there's a damn good chance you'll be forced to proceed too far to be able to return to the runway.
If I'm a poor pilot.
No, the situation will prevent you no matter how hot you think your shit is. As an extreme example of what I mean; if you go screaming past your landing site at mach 2, sorry, there's no way you're going to be able to redirect all that momentum and still have enough energy to land.
After you initially lied about the kind of barrier present I'm supposed to go find your evidence for you? And by the way, why do you think they'd have the SOAS unless they expected the shuttle rollout would likely exceed the runway length? It's actually a point in my favor in that regard, and although it could minimize potential damage I don't see any place where it says it will always eliminate it altogether. In that case, we should expect that the shuttle is damaged on some percentage of its 100+ fake missions, but I don't see you having the intellectual honesty to admit any of that.
SOAS, like EMAS, is an emergency system. It is not used for standard flight. I see no evidence that NASA states all landing will need a restraint system. How did I lie about the system present? I suggested EMAC could slow an orbiter at a site. Is that false?
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Considering that EMAS didn't exist in the timeframe we're talking about and is not documented to exist on any shuttle landing site, yes, you lied. Considering that SOAS takes 8 hours to set up, it is "used" (in the sense that it is set up) for every flight, if only at the TAL sites. But of course, I'm sure that has nothing to do with the 1/3rd reduced runway length at some TAL sites...
Do you have evidence that EMAS is not used at the NASA site(s)?
You made the claim, please provide evidence that EMAS is used at NASA sites in the timeframe we were talking about or admit you lied.
Are you admitting the secret sites exist but that they do not use EMAS and instead use SOAS? How did you come by this knowledge?
Where did I say "secret sites exist"? It's been documented that NASA uses SOAS at TAL sites, not EMAS. It's reasonable to assume that if they were going to use a "secret site" they'd use SOAS since that's what they came up with. Once again though, the fact that they developed SOAS in the first place exclusively for use at TAL sites shows what I've been saying all along; it's reasonable to expect a runway over-run at a TAL abort.