If you look down the road at the effect a lack of spin training has, look at how many fatal Vmc events there are...the entry looks the same, and the recover is the same, but most pilots I've seen demonstrate inadvertent Vmc rolls can't come up with the recovery inputs to save their life. Basic spin proficiency would probably improve those statistics dramatically as well.
A local DPE has mentioned that he’s been put fully inverted by more than one multi-engine applicant during their checkrides. That just floors me how much aerodynamic knowledge has to not be fully grasped to let a Vmc demo get that far out of control when a person is supposedly “at their peak performance” for a checkride.
Clearly they failed, but one has to wonder how many CFIs they had prior to that ride and how much bad or unlearned/not retained/not correlated information has to have just somehow passed them completely by in lots of hours of training all the way from their first flights, to get a typical trainer twin that crossed up after some MEI signed them off as “ready”.
Insanity. Totally insanity.
Easier said than done. I have my doubts that even the most competent fighter pilot would be able to recover from a base to final stall/spin.
As others have mentioned, it recognition and proper recovery of the incipient part of the spin that’s critical at low altitude.
James called it “step on the high side”.
@jesse calls it “step on the sky”. Quite a few trainers with docile behaviors simply wont go over if you’re pressing the outside rudder pedal to the floor. They’ll try mightily but they won’t go over. They’ll fall into a massive slip to the side and mostly recover their own stalled state until you release the massive back pressure you’re holding on the elevator to keep them there.
What spin training does is give you those visual, audible, and other cues that the airplane is about to break and go. Only some airplanes really do that so violently that you can’t react and stop the beginning of autorotation.
Here is an interesting read from AOPA.
https://www.aopa.org/asf/ntsb/stall_spin.html
Here is a graph from that article that really refutes the belief that removing spin training would result in more spin fatals. 1949 was when the spin requirement was removed (Arrow). Maybe there are other reasons. Better planes, better training who knows.
View attachment 65118
Lots of changes in what the “typical” trainer aircraft were over that timeframe and how well behaved they were when induced into a spin. The beginning of that graph you’re talking Stearmans were the trainer of choice, really. Middle, the spam cans with docile behaviors came along.
The other obvious problem with that graph that would have been nice to know is this: How many of those accidents were training accidents vs post-training. Another line for that number on that graph would have been nice.
I was told that on a ppl check ride when demonstrating slow flight the stall horn better never come on..
Theory is, if you train that way you will never put yourself in a stall/spin situation.
My take is, if you train that way and some day you find yourself beyond that point you might do something wrong or not know what to do.
I feel the same way on spins, it should be taught.
I would rather experience the edges of the envelope with an experienced pilot (cfi, etc) than discover them by accident on my own one day.
That’s the modern way now. Recover at first sign of anything. For the Private checkride anyway.
They removed that from the updated Commercial ACS now, though and the examiner can ask to go into the warning.
I can’t think of any good instructor who isn’t teaching both the real deal all the way into the warnings and also the “FAA checkride way” so students will pass without upsetting the new and improved apple cart.
I think your reasoning to continue past the warnings and see what really happens with an instructor and airplane who can demonstrate it properly and even let you induce it, is sound. You can’t have a deep respect for something you’ve never seen. You literally just don’t know why.
I have not met a CFI yet who hasn’t had at least one student (usually way more) put the aircraft into an inadvertent spin in aircraft that are spinnable. The CFI usually has to catch it and usually does in something that shouldn’t be spun, but many have those stories too ...
It has to be the biggest lesson that isn’t in the books for all new CFIs that starts being passed to you completely unsolicited by every CFI you know the second you tell them you’ve earned the certificate. You’ll get private messages, phone calls, texts, all saying the same essential thing:
“Welcome to the club. Every pilot you meet from now on will probably try to kill you in one way or another. Never ever let your guard down. Even for the good pilots. Their mistakes are usually the scariest ones.”