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I was practicing crosswind landings today in a low wing aircraft when I lost it on rollout. I didn't hold in the aileron after I got the mains down, which allowed the wind to pick up the upwind (left) wing and banked the airplane hard to the right. The left main came off the pavement but the right main stayed down and the plane pivoted hard around this point. The right wingtip came dangerously (within a foot or less) to dragging on the wingtip but I was able to correct with aileron and got it back into ground effect. At this point I gave it full power and got the hell out.
I'm feeling a bit guilty for having come so close to causing damage to the airplane. I can definitely say I took a quantum leap in piloting ability; I truly recognize the importance of keeping the aileron correction in throughout the rollout. I violated a fundamental part of flying that I drill into my students which is to not stop flying the airplane through the rollout.
Lesson learned: Do not center the aileron after mains are down and keep the back pressure in to bleed off speed during a crosswind landing.
I'm feeling a bit guilty for having come so close to causing damage to the airplane. I can definitely say I took a quantum leap in piloting ability; I truly recognize the importance of keeping the aileron correction in throughout the rollout. I violated a fundamental part of flying that I drill into my students which is to not stop flying the airplane through the rollout.
Lesson learned: Do not center the aileron after mains are down and keep the back pressure in to bleed off speed during a crosswind landing.