I actually tried to get the sport pilot gyroplane cert two weeks ago. I had hoped to do it in a 5 day, 2 lessons a day, schedule but I came up a little short. Basic air maneuvers are pretty easy and I knocked them out in an hour or two. Takeoffs kicked my butt. As someone mentioned, you have to manage the rotor making sure you get enough RPM for takeoff before disengaging the pre-rotator, then releasing the brake, and adding power (but not full power). All that happens in about 2 seconds. Then you have to manage acceleration and use really small adjustments to get the nose wheel a few inches off the ground and get into a stable position to apply full power. During this, you have to add a lot of rudder to compensate for the added p factor. Then you have to hold the aircraft in ground effect until you get enough air speed to climb out. My last flight I did 5 clean take offs so I declared victory and went home. Tail wheel instruction helped a bit in terms of managing the stick.
Landings are easier. I kept letting the nose wheel drop too soon but they were otherwise safe. When you do it right...pull back the rotor when you are still on two wheels, the rotor acts as a big drag break and you can stop in an area the size of a basketball court. I’m still about 4-8 hours away from getting the cert but I’m not sure I’ll finish. I did this on lark and it was a good experience but unless I buy one, I don’t know if I’d ever get a chance to fly one again.
They’re safe, maybe even a lot safer than fixed wing, after proper training and some experience. The dreaded rotor flap (unloading the rotor by going negative g or violent maneuvers) isn’t a much as problem as I feared but if it happens, it’s bad and happens fast. I’m told most accidents happen on take off but usually result in broken aircraft and not people.
I think for missions like ranching or oil field operations, these are ideal aircraft. Not cheap though. One of the Cavalon’s I saw sold for over $130k. One person I talked to said that it had helicopter-like performance for a 1/3 the cost. Another way to look at it is that it has C150 like performance for 3 times the cost. It only cruises at about 110 at best.
On the last flight, for the landing, the instructor pulled power to idle with the gyro 600 feet over the numbers. We did a evaluator-like descent to about 50 feet over the runway, then he dropped the nose, added a little power and we landed within a 100 feet. That’s at least something a C150 can’t do.