woodchucker
Pattern Altitude
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- Sep 20, 2014
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woodchucker
I wouldn’t expect anyone to keep them on for long after that landing.Are those the pilot’s pants on the runway?
I did that, but the nosewheel kept the plane from going completely over. An engine teardown, new prop, and plastic wingtip, and it was good as new.
Honestly, you could do this in a trike too, albeit a bit harder.Fly a trike. Simple and effective prevention of this scenario in most cases.
Can't let that get in the way of his trolling.Honestly, you could do this in a trike too, albeit a bit harder.
At first I thought the plane said "Wings over Wheels" which would have been ironic!
Are those the pilot’s pants on the runway?
Fly a trike. Simple and effective prevention of this scenario in most cases.
In defense, my post is not a troll at all. Your post is much more of a troll.Can't let that get in the way of his trolling.
It is a lesson that can be learned. If you fly tail wheel, ground loops and nose-overs are something that can bite you in the ass at any moment. Practice (especially ground handling) is even more important for those pilots.A trike would’ve been less likely to do this, probably. A car would be even less likely than a trike. So what?
Folks, this is why you always put on clean underwear before a flight, just in case your britches come off during the crash....
Helps also when you get stranded overnight due to WX away from home unexpectedly.
The average pilot thinks trikes are safer, so he/she gets careless and wrecks the trike anyway. There are so many ways to do that:In defense, my post is not a troll at all. Your post is much more of a troll.
Trike gear airplanes are notably more stable during landing than conventional gear planes (with equally competent pilots behind both). You can’t really debate that fact. It shows in insurance rates, this picture is case in point. You can keep your tail wheel, enjoy the high insurance, and also the occasional ground loop with accompanied damaged wingtip or engine.
Flying "a trike" is no guarantee that locking the brakes will not result in a noseover; however, flying a taildragger absolutely ensures a had landing will not result in a nosegear collapse. False dichotomies like these examples are pretty much meaningless but may help to soothe or bruise egos depending on which side of the fence you're on.Fly a trike. Simple and effective prevention of this scenario in most cases.
At least there is one other smart person on the forum.I am not sure what is the point of rehashing this yet again… people who do detailed risk assessment for living base their financial protections on the fact that trikes are a significantly safer choice but hey ….folks on this forum just know better …
And yet, like I said, we paid no more for insurance on the Citabrias than on the 150s or 172s. Maybe the guys that sell insurance know something? Or maybe we just had stupid insurance agents?I am not sure what is the point of rehashing this yet again… people who do detailed risk assessment for living base their financial protections on the fact that trikes are a significantly safer choice but hey ….folks on this forum just know better …
How long ago was that? If more pilots are crashing their tail wheels today, so be it, but it doesn’t change the current insurance facts.And yet, like I said, we paid no more for insurance on the Citabrias than on the 150s or 172s. Maybe the guys that sell insurance know something? Or maybe we just had stupid insurance agents?
We should only fly single engine, fixed gear, 2-4 seat airplanes. Insurance says they're the cheapest. Time to get rid of all other airplanes, twins, retracts, taildraggers, 5+ seat planes. Think of the children, it's for safety.
Don't worry, nothing will get in the way of his trolling... I feel like I have heard that before.That’s not the point really …. It is people arguing that taildraggers are not inherently more dangerous and it is all just a matter of skills which is clearly not correct.
Don't worry, nothing will get in the way of his trolling... I feel like I have heard that before.
He even stated that it will make his insurance rates go up again. Wonder why that is? Perhaps because taildraggers continue to prove themselves more likely to be damaged in landing or ground handling accidents?
Yeah, but I don't worry about my insurance rates going up when some other student bounces a 172 and prangs a nosewheel, but the taildragger pilots somehow know theirs' will go up when they see a taildragger crash. Nobody is talking about crashing their own plane and a subsequent increase in their insurance rates. A greater percentage of tailwheel planes crash, therefore the insurance rates are higher.Wreck your trike and watch your insurance go up.
I wasn't arguing that they were less expensive to insure. Our experience was that they were the same. This is in Canada, where maybe the training requirements are stricter. Nor did I say that taildraggers are easier to land. How in the world do you get this stuff from my post? And no, they're not more likely to be damaged if the pilot is properly trained and doesn't get complacent. Complacency gets both trike and taildragger pilots. There are plenty of taildragger pilots that have never groundlooped or nosed over. Crop sprayers come to mind, and they make landings and takeoff all day every day all through the season. If taildraggers were so dangerous, those airplanes would all be trikes.I don't really care about what type of plane you fly. But don't try to argue that tailwheel planes are currently less expensive to insure, they aren't. People who have recently tried to insure them have reported this over and over again. And don't try to say that somehow tailwheel planes are easier to land and less likely to be damaged than their nosewheel counterparts. They aren't. You even agree that they are more of a handful. Sure this can be used as a learning experience, and it will eventually make a better pilot. But even with that better pilot, they are more likely to damage their airplane if it is a tailwheel than a nosewheel.