I recently went to fly with a friend of mine in a plane that was converted into a taildagger ( to make it a towplane ).
We ( he ) did 6-7 landings ( including several touch and go:s ) several stalls ( clean and with flaps etc ). Also rehearsed the infamous engine cuts at take off ( at 500 ft ) and plane returns to airfield.
For a pilot with 1000 flying hours all this seemed extremely easy and effortless business.
How is this for a less experinced pilot flying a tricycle plane...I assume the tricycle would cause more air resistance and maneuveres differently in ground handling. The taildagger needed lotsa pedalling and also the costant eye on the speedometer to watch that the airspeed will not be reduced under 65 mph until on the tarmac.
My question is...how much flying hours does it take to really be the master of the taildaggerplane and handle all engine-out situations in the best possible way in emergency...what in your opinion would be the minimum amount of logged flyinghours ?
Is the same amount needed for a nosewheel plane ( does it make any difference ? ) ?
We ( he ) did 6-7 landings ( including several touch and go:s ) several stalls ( clean and with flaps etc ). Also rehearsed the infamous engine cuts at take off ( at 500 ft ) and plane returns to airfield.
For a pilot with 1000 flying hours all this seemed extremely easy and effortless business.
How is this for a less experinced pilot flying a tricycle plane...I assume the tricycle would cause more air resistance and maneuveres differently in ground handling. The taildagger needed lotsa pedalling and also the costant eye on the speedometer to watch that the airspeed will not be reduced under 65 mph until on the tarmac.
My question is...how much flying hours does it take to really be the master of the taildaggerplane and handle all engine-out situations in the best possible way in emergency...what in your opinion would be the minimum amount of logged flyinghours ?
Is the same amount needed for a nosewheel plane ( does it make any difference ? ) ?
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