dmspilot
Final Approach
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- Oct 20, 2006
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I understand that aerobatic aircraft will better demonstrate fully developed stalls, but if you never plan on instructing in a Pitts, Extra, or Citabria, why do your spin training in them?
It's not simply "spin training". It's instructor training. The point isn't to learn how to spin and recover, it's how to teach about spins and recoveries.
I think it is highly improbably that an instructor will ever only fly one type of aircraft and that all of their students they ever teach will ever only fly one type of aircraft.
An instructor should have experience and knowledge beyond the level to which they will be teaching. It's a pretty basic and often-used concept. That's why CFI's have to have commercial pilot certificates and instrument ratings to teach private pilots.
You might as well ask "is there any data showing that knowing how to do a lazy 8 or an ILS approach helps someone teach turns around a point?" I don't know, is there? Is data necessary to see that it's a good idea because more experience is better than less?
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