jtrain609
Antisocial Monster
That I agree with....
But the logic "It will probably never happen, so why bother teaching it?" I dont agree with.
Commercial students will prbably never do a lazy eight in a RJ, so why bother teaching it?
Why dont we just teach straight and level and landings?
MLF....
I have read a lot of your post through the years and respect you a lot. I know you genuinlly care about the level of learning your students recieve. I know you are not a "CFI timebuilder".
We had a student at our school that was deathly afraid of spins. I told him when we were in the practice area on his EOC that I would show him proper recovery from spins. It took him a while to agree, but he had a great time and relized he had nothing to be afraid of!
True dat. What I usually did was explained to them why to not try to step on the rudder during their base to final turn and when they did during landing practice, we'd stop doing landings and go out and do spins.
I showed them very clearly what they were trying to do to us. It did three things:
-Made them realize spins are nothing to be afraid of if you're at altitude
-Made them realize they were SCREWED if they spun it in on base to final
-Made them see what caused said spin and they'd make the connection of stepping on the rudder pedal to try to increase your rate of turn during your base to final turn isn't a good idea, and the resulting spin is why.