exncsurfer
Pattern Altitude
Try and simplify as much as possible, the lateral alignment is just staying on center line, having the left and right corners of the runway angles match, fix that with aileron. Now the yaw axis was the trickiest for me, the car does it for you, in the airplane its arbitrary and you have to control it manually. I'd feel like i was perfectly aligned and the instructor would say the nose was left or right. I tried getting behind the airplane on the ground to see what in the distance it was pointing at then sitting in it to see where that distant point was from the pilot seat. That didn't seem to help much, I guess I just eventually got it or close enough. If your mains touch first and you're pretty close it'll straighten out and not feel jerky.(I think Ercoups have to land this way every time anyway). Another problem I had was not staying fluid, what worked at 40 ft might not work at 20, what worked at 20 may not work at 10. I would set my inputs and want to keep them fixed. At any instant you have to adjust to keep it centered with aileron, aligned with rudder. The wind will shift or change speeds on you so you have to react constantly. Good luck, we're all counting on you.So that's the crux of my problem. As I'm landing, I have NO clue if I'm drifting left or right because of cross-winds and have trouble knowing where 'pointed down the runway' actually is. I'm so busy trying not to bash the plane into the runway that the perception of lateral movement and alignment is just gone.
And the '6 inches off the runway' thing...again, NO clue how far up I actually am. I have limited peripheral vision because I wear glasses and can't see clearly anything that's not in front of me. At this point, I think I'd almost prefer beefier gear and 3 wires...just crash the thing into the runway!
Part of my internal concern is just as described above. Lots of landings and the basic perception of where I am in 3D space is just not there. I'm hoping this is going to be like learning to do a back flip; the first dozen times you do it it's just blind rotation hoping you stick the landing and don't break your neck. Then one time you actually SEE the mat as you hit the peak of the flip and 'OH...THERE'S THE GROUND' and now you stick every landing.
Good advice all, thank you!
disclaimer: low time private pilot, trained in a 172