???you never get singed off in something like a champ .50 years in and i sign myself off every flight. if you understand you will relies it is always know it is a work in progress .
I would have to go back and look, but I think I had about 3-4 hrs in a J-3. Back before TW endorsements were required.
I just don't know how you get that done in 3hrs.
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I haven't had a bad landing since so the plane is no longer for sale!...
What qualifies as a bad landing? It is nearly impossible to fly TW and not bounce one on occasion I have seen people with tons of hours in all sorts of TW planes have a "bad" TW landing or two.
Before solo? About 4-5 flights.And how much Glider time did you have?
^^^This^^^ Cubs, Champs, T-Crafts, Great Lakes, Stearmans, Stinsons, they all fly the same.Meh, doesn't matter the taildragger.
If you build a good foundation, it's all the same.
Before solo? About 4-5 flights.
My glider flights were many many many years after my initial J-3 time.
I did my initial TW training in a straight tail C-150 Texas Taildragger, 100hp, with an inoperative airspeed indicator. The strip, Goose Bay, is about 2000' with an approach over ocean water and a 60' sheer cliff near the threshold. Good times.
New realization: when I land and it is going straight, keep it so and do not try to get back to the center of the runway. Straight is more important than centered.
The endorsement means you might be safe under near perfectly calm conditions. At this point, A sane FBo would never rent you a tw unless he or she was daft. It takes quite a few hours to become adept at crosswinds, gusts, etc. I flew tail wheel for about 1000 hours before I flew a nose wheel. They were a snap. taildraggers ,other light ones like cub, champ , luscomb, etc. are quite easy. They are NOT the same as a stearman, 195, or a 180. Different and you must pay much more attention. They will nip you otherwise. None are " harder to land on hard surface" if you have some time in the aircraft. Just harder on the tires. Look at the stearman from the front. Narrow gear and it sits rather high. Wants to ground loop and will if you dope off. ( I would never fly an aircraft with a broken asi if I didn't have a lot of time in it) a lot!
New realization: when I land and it is going straight, keep it so and do not try to get back to the center of the runway. Straight is more important than centered.
That's horse s...t. I'm sure you've never been in a Cessna 195 in a cross wind or a stearman solo. . They are not the same ....for sure. You sure would not have flown mine with that attitude. Insurance company actuarials know better too. That's why they demand lots of instruction in both. I'm glad you didn't instruct me.If you're signing folks off who only "might" be OK, and only in near perfect conditions, you're basically pencil whipping endorsements from tailwheel rides.
As far as "light" tailwheels not being the same as a heavy one, again this probably is rooted in the same pizz poor instruction from the statement above, I learned to fly in a 7AC, I've flown everything from calairs to AG Cats to my 185, and tons in between, I've also instructed folks extensively from 0 time all the way up in taildraggers, it's all the same as long as you have good fundamentals, after that it's just getting familiar with the cockpit, control forces and throughs, and "where your legs are" for landing.
It's just fundamentals, but if it makes you feel cool to say how "hard" the tw planes you have flown were to take off and land, don't let me rain on your parade.
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Isn't that what you're doing too? Bragging about your TW experience ad nauseam in this thread so the rest of us are impressed with your skill?
My J-3 time was in 1982 and 1983. No tailwheel time after that. I did not start flying gliders until 1997.I was wondering how much glider time you had before starting in Taildragger airplanes and if you thought it helped. But that obviously wasn't the case. Do you think the taildragger time you had helped with learning gliders?