As I learn how near full proficiency a student should be in the modern world, I see why so many have amazing high numbers of hours in their log books before first solo.
My solo was at 12 h0urs, only 9 hours recent. I had been taught to recognize whether the plane was going to be flared and on the runway before the mid point, and go missed if in doubt.
The instructor announced MISSED on perfectly good approaches, to see that I did the clean up and go properly. With a Cessna 150, full gross, and 40 degrees of flaps, the sequence is important, as the pilot in Wisconsin found out fatally. Our decisions were made at 50 or more feet in the air. The consequences of missing one of the steps was not immediate, and corrections were readily made.
RANT ON
7 bodies hauled to the nearest hospital from just one end of our runway does cause local pilots to be more concerned about the safety of touch and goes, pre planed, or spur of the moment. I helped pull 4 of them out of the burning wreckage. All 4 had serious burns.
SHOUTING HERE.....THE LAST SUCH INCIDENT NEARLY ENDED OUR AIRPORT.
The Cessna had a high, fast approach, went to full flaps to try to get down, and after half the runway was behind him, and hardly touched the wheels to the pavement, attempted to go around. full power produced little climb, with the stall horn blaring. He finally eased some flaps off, and was clearly going to clear the railroad tracks.
The sudden appearance of the Metro train full of commuters spoiled that view, and he was now headed straight for the window line, a woman saw him and screamed, causing all the passengers in that car to look out at a spinning propeller less than 100 feet away, and headed exactly at them.
The pilot pulled back on the yoke, the plane did not stall, and he just barely cleared the train.
The passengers on that train complained, and demanded that that dangerous airport be shut down. We did survive that event, but would we if he had NOT cleared the train, but crashed into those windows? At least half a dozen people would have had contact with the engine and propeller, gasoline would have been dumped into the car, and who knows how much more would have occurred?
The train would not have had ready access to emergency equipment unless the engineer wisely continued to the next station, as there are no parallel public roads in that portion of the rails.
That is how close College Park airport came to ending its claim to being the oldest continuously operated airport in the world. It would now be a commemorative park, with swings, slides, and teeter totters. Just another park with an historic sign.
Poor pilot training that does not teach students to recognize a bad approach until they are on the runway is a continuing danger to not only the students, but all the rest of the pilot community.
I achieved my PPL at 41 hours, and in my first 100 hours, I never used more than 1,000 feet of runway, and never did a go around from less than 50 feet AGL. My instructor taught that standard, and I followed his teaching. That has never caused me any trouble, and little expense. The club put about 4,000 hours on that well worn 150, and at least 15 guys and gals earned their PPL in it, and there was zero, no, sheet metal damage
Rant over.
People here complain about high insurance rates, but flying closer to the limits sometimes find us over the other side, and the total fleet rates go up. Our club had discounts for accident free years many times, so our stricter than Federal limits paid off, both in our training and personal flying. Our rates were lower than some of the other clubs in our vicinity, and lower repair costs and cheaper insurance rates were part of the difference. We also invited a couple of pilots to resign for using their discretion, instead of the club rules. At least one of them crashed someone else's plane.