I am just dumbfounded as to how two FAA examiners can interpret the maneuver so differently.
As we discussed previously on Yahoo, your first DPE believed in constant power. I don't know what your second DPE expected but then you had much calmer winds.
During my ride, the wind ended up being about thirty degrees off between what I experienced at 4,000 and down at 1,700 where I began Eights. As a result, I started getting lower than I would have liked during the upwind segment so I did add a tad power. That kept up my ground speed without having to descend further. The DPE said nothing and I already knew from a previous conversation he'd rather see an adjustment for safe maneuvering rather than just continue maneuvering yourself into the ground.
While he didn't say this, the impression I got from my several experiences with him during oral and other conversations was... he'd rather see a safe operation and a thorough understanding of how the maneuver should be taught and performed as much or more than simply a maneuver within PTS. You won't achieve perfection every time but setup, proper procedure, correction and safety are as important as the PTS. Without them, the PTS is meaningless.
My last maneuver was technically a bust. On a Power-off 180, I had put the gear down on the previous landing and left it down. I had to do a couple 360's on downwind to allow a CRJ to land before I could get a clearance for a short-final. I turned in, waited until centerline for full flaps but was still high. I pushed rudder into a forward slip so hard, I turned off the headset control in the side pocket with my calf. I crossed still just a tad fast, maybe five knots. It became a fine line between flaring with that extra speed and floating so I stayed barely nose high. I touched down just beyond the two-hundred, maybe another 30-50 feet.
Here I had a good flight, all went well and I blew the last one. I was not a happy camper. I continued to taxi on down and was turning off the runway when he suddenly says, "That looked like about two-hundred, didn't it?" I thought he might give me a pass but I wasn't going to lie about my performance. I replied, "I'd have liked it a lot shorter. If I had pulled flaps sooner, I'd have had it."
At that point he says he'll need my log book to sign it. I'm thinking, "I passed? How did that happen?!?!?"
Something the DPE wasn't happy with had to do with another guy who came with me. Tim had taken his commercial ride the day before in 29kt winds. He blew the Power Off 180 and turned too far out, coming well short of the mark. He split the ride with me so he could do that maneuver and get his CPL.
Before we left Atlanta, something made me ask if he had his 8710. He said his CFI told him he didn't need one. Then, I saw the pink slip in his hand with other papers. It clearly said, "Notice of Disapproval." I asked his CFI. The CFI said an 8710 wasn't required. While I walked back to speak with the school owner, Tim called the DPE. Both said he needed one. Then, the owner tells the CFI to call the DPE. Again, the CFI is told he needs an 8710.
DPE's like to see the paperwork they are required to submit to the FAA, including the 8710. More so, they like to see the required flight time. The previous week, the DPE sent an instrument rating candidate back home to his school. Why? The instrument candidate showed up with his 8710... with 15.6 cross-country hours indicated, verified by his log book.
Mark, it sounds like your first DPE had a "Do it within the PTS or die" kind of attitude. But, after it's all said and done... we both made it!