@tspear I get it. I do. But there’s airplanes that are a LOT more unforgiving than a Cirrus. To cross over the line from “this thing needs a bit more care” to “this thing teaches me to be a better pilot just because my instructor doesn’t want to die, and let’s me get away with chit in a Skyhawk” is where it goes a little over the line into marketing wank and fanboy-ism.
If someone wanted to say soloing a Pitts made them a better pilot, I’m more inclined to agree with that than someone saying the Cirrus did it for them.
Or something so high powered that won’t even allow a full power takeoff because there literally isn’t enough right rudder authority to keep it on the runway.
Those are extreme examples, but I use them because the Cirrus is far from extreme.
@Ted DuPuis has way more chit to think about and handle in his MU-2 than any Cirrus pilot.
Most of the precision and desire for precision is driven by the standard the instructor sets, and can be accomplished in a “forgiving” or “unforgiving” aircraft. Problem is, a lot of instructors won’t demand precision. They’ll suddenly demand it when the airplane is going to kill them and their student instead of demanding it in all airplanes.
That’s a human factors thing more than the airplane being “better” because it’s fussy. Don’t demand precision in a Skyhawk you’ll have to break bad habits later in anything bigger and faster or more complex.
Landing a nosedragger while being blown sideways across the runway has to be just as “wrong” as doing it in a taildragger when teaching. It’s just that the taildragger will bite both the student and instructor square in the ass if the instructor allows it. So magically the standard “changes”. Or does it? Nope. The standard was always there. The instructors just let people get away with chit flying when it won’t kill them too.
And sadly one of the highest fatality rates in the Cirri taken by themselves, is when you remove weather related numbers is the base to final turn. Usually WITH and instructor on board, which just floors me. Something is wrong with the building blocks stacked in two peoples heads, one who’s supposed to be teaching them, for that accident to occur.
I get it when someone says they’d rather see someone trained in a less docile airplane than most trainers. But usually that also means they themselves get it, that the standard itself needs to be maintained in all aircraft. It’s an attitude and it starts at the first lesson.