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Corky Scott wrote
Perhaps. On the other hand, during the war years it was routine to solo students in as few as 8 to 12 hours of stick time. This is with no previous experience and in some cases no previous experience even driving a car. In addition, the trainer was inevitably a taildragger. True. The standard military trainer of the time was a Stearman. These days, it's considered a tricky, high performance (sic!) biplane. There were some important things you're leaving out, though. Training to solo took place on open grass fields. Cross wind landing were not taught - or done. The students were all young and eager. There was no radio work and no instrument work - just airwork and landings. Every field had a truck standing by. Each truck had a repair crew - and a bed full of ailerons. The crews could replace an aileron on a groundlooped airplane and have it ready for service in SEVEN MINUTES. Imagine how much practice they got. A groundloop was no big deal. Most older taildraggers are pussycats on wide open grass fields landing into the wind - it's landing on paved narrow crosswind runways with obstructions that makes them exciting. If all I had to do was teach the average teenager to land, only on grass and into the wind, and only well enough that I could be certain he would not hurt himself - the occasional groundloop not being a big deal - I could solo them in 6 hours all day long and twice on Sunday. Realistically, I can't solo a brand new student in 6 hours these days. My home field only has one narrow paved runway, aligned cross to the prevailing winds and with structures and trees that make any crosswind gusty. The pattern is busy, and radio use is expected. The FAA gives me a laundry list of things I have to do with them before I solo them. These days, if someone soloes in under 10 hours, that's pretty good, and generally indicates better than average preparation. Michael |
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