I feel like I'm not teaching landings very well. A lot of people seem to keep zigzagging through the centerline on final and the only real advice I have is to stop overcorrecting, which I think is what's going on combined with flat out overcontrolling the airplane. I'm having a really hard time getting anyone to round out and flare at the right altitude either. It seems like everyone is either rounding out really high and I have to save it from smashing onto the runway or we're rounding out too late and I find myself paranoid we're going to plant it on the nosewheel and break something. Any suggestions? I'm telling them to level out at about 10 feet and act like they're trying to hold that altitude and everything will fall together, and I'm teaching them to shift their eyes to the far end of the runway during the flare, but every roundout still makes me almost cringe because we feel like we're going to drop in or plant it on the nosewheel. Any suggestions? I feel like it's a real weak spot in my teaching at the moment (brand new CFI, all my students are in the <10 hour category)
Another thing, and this is probably a matter of opinion, but when should I step in to save them from breaking something? I think part of the reason I'm so paranoid is I did a checkout and let one progress a little too far, slammed onto the nosewheel and managed to flatspot a brand new tire and put the airplane out of service while they changed it. This was within my first 10 hours of dual given so needless to say it shook me a tad and I'm paranoid about the student really breaking something, be it a tire, punching the nose strut up into the cowling, bending a firewall, or worse. But at the same time I feel like I'm on the controls entirely too much "helping" them and that's not good either, so I need to work out when to step in and when to let it go.
Any advice is appreciated! Especially in how to get my students to get the roundout and flare down properly.
Another thing, and this is probably a matter of opinion, but when should I step in to save them from breaking something? I think part of the reason I'm so paranoid is I did a checkout and let one progress a little too far, slammed onto the nosewheel and managed to flatspot a brand new tire and put the airplane out of service while they changed it. This was within my first 10 hours of dual given so needless to say it shook me a tad and I'm paranoid about the student really breaking something, be it a tire, punching the nose strut up into the cowling, bending a firewall, or worse. But at the same time I feel like I'm on the controls entirely too much "helping" them and that's not good either, so I need to work out when to step in and when to let it go.
Any advice is appreciated! Especially in how to get my students to get the roundout and flare down properly.