TwoTwoLeft
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It's for this reason I actually dread checkout flights more than I do flying with brand new students.
"So after I prang this thing on and nearly break the airplane twice in .3 I'm going to take my 3 kids up for an hour and fly around, sound good?"
Yeaaaahh... No.
The "flat landers" were the worst because they think they are doing a good job and safely landing the airplane. "Awww come on! It was a perfect 3 pointer!" Sorry, but 3 pointers only count in taildraggers... It's not their fault, they were just taught wrong, or not recognizing when to use a short field technique. They probably had 6000+ ft of runway to work with and a CFI that was scared to fly below 70kts. With having a smaller pattern and 2700 ft of runway, the flight school was pretty adamant on "positive control" for landings. This meant: touching down mains first, on the first 1/3 of the runway, maintain center line with your feet, hold aft stick/yoke, nose wheel touches when you let it. If you couldn't do that, you couldn't rent. Some checkouts would get all huffy about it, and I would calmly remind them that my students do it all the time.
On a side note... I always found it interesting that if you watch the landings during a busy day in the pattern the solo students are consistently making the best landings and the occasional transient pilots' landings typically look like a bunch of mistakes that just happen to come together in the end.