Some folks seem to believe t&gs are adequate practice for full-stops, but I disagree... especially with tailwheel aircraft. :o
Some folks seem to believe t&gs are adequate practice for full-stops, but I disagree... especially with tailwheel aircraft. :o
I know I'm out of date but back in the early 60s our Tiger Moths could be seen doing circuits & bumps all day & every day. This was before nosewheel trainers became popular & all training was done on taildraggers. Like most training at the time this was on a grass airfield. There was no hard runway & take off & landing were directly into wind. The average lesson was of 30 minutes duration so there was no time to spare messing around on the ground. If you did a proper 3-pointer the aircraft would come to a stop before opening the throttle, raising the tail & off again for another go. The same methods were used by the RAF both during & for several years after WWII.
Aha... point well-taken, sir... but that is a "stop-and-go", a very different animal from what many of today's students call a "touch-and-go"... which usually means getting airborne again with plenty of speed to spare. Most of my primary instructors were very keen on goosing it ASAP in those 172s and 150s and getting going again, and I honestly never saw much point to it other than saving time.
It was like a go-around after crossing the threshold, only with the added distraction of trying to touch down properly.
I'd imagine these Moths you speak of had tail skids... I'll bet they slowed down very quickly once the tail hit the turf.
But my mention of taildraggers was to drive home the point that "the landing ain't over until it's tied down"... a sound philosophy even when handling a big trike.
A little taildragger with a tailwheel can keep you working quite a bit stopping, exiting and taxiing... and parking. I think it's good to practice that often, early on.
Tailwheel aircraft are so over-rated. All you gotta do is keep the RPM up enough so the tail doesn't have to touch the ground and that solves your whole ground loop problem.
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