I can't say I endorse the article... for one thing, you're saying "you don't need to do it this specific way" then sort of outline a specific way to do it. And there's more, IMHO, that makes it not-so-useful as a "how to" that can be applied to any landing in any airplane at any airport under any conditions. Every plane has its "sweet spots" in terms of attitudes, configuration, power settings, and airspeeds, but the basics are the framework on which all those specifics hang.
I am not an instructor, but will always consider myself a student, and after a few hundred landings- good, bad, and mediocre, and many without an engine with which to fix my mistakes- here's what I've learned, that applies in every scenario:
-Airspeed:
Most important thing is airspeed. You barely mention it, and that bothers me. This is not some side note- it's the "secret", really, the essence of making the whole glide to touchdown work the way you want it to. With power, without power, flaps or no flaps, in wind, crosswind, gusts, no wind, tailwind, thermals, shear, in the dark, in precip, on fire, whatever. ASI not working? Airspeed-
the airspeed that is best under the circumstances- is still important. Can't land smoothly or accurately with no ASI? Practice without it. It's important enough that, IMHO, everybody should be able to do it without an ASI. There are other cues, specific to each airplane... they are reliable, and using them more keeps your eyes and brain out there on the runway, not on the panel or in the POH. 1.3X Vso is a great starting point, and woe betide the pilot who strays far from that in either direction, but not all good landings are made with precisely 1.3X Vso on short final.
Same goes for the stabilized vs unstabilized approach: normally, target airspeeds at abeam, base, final, and short final work great, which is why it's the standard nowadays, but it's good to be able to simply do what you must to arrive at the selected touchdown point with the plane doing what you want it to do. In the end, that's all a stabilized approach should get you, anyway. I believe that even to fly a nice textbook stabilized approach, you need to accept that, or you will not be ahead of the airplane as you should be.
On the PPASEL check ride, the examiner may well look at the ASI to confirm you are somewhere near the target airspeeds for the plane and conditions, but they will probably be more satisfied with your demonstrated competence if they see you arrived at it without fixating on the ASI, "chasing the needle" with pitch or power adjustments.
Another thought: the guy who taught me to fly taildraggers mentioned that in most light singles, the ultimate approach is to start reducing power abeam the touchdown point, and gradually reduce it until the throttle is closed just as you reach the "flare", or "moment of truth". There's some sense in that, and I won't argue with someone who's been teaching that for 40-plus years and has also made carrier landings in piston twins.
But as he pointed out, it's not easy to do consistently, and it's more of an ideal model of energy management than an easily-standardized practice.
It's good to be able to do it right without power, too- engine-failure statistics be damned. If you can land consistently well without power, you have got something special that could save your life someday. Some people will tell you that the same applies to landing with only trim and power (imagine a jammed or ineffective control scenario), and I won't argue with that, although I've never tried that in earnest.
At any rate, it is clear that there is no specific aim point, instrument indication, power setting, or control deflection that makes a landing "good"... but airspeed, directional control, and height awareness must all be nominal for the situation, or it will be a "bad" landing.
-The initial aim point:
I do agree with the thrust of the article; as a beginner, I often spoiled perfectly good approaches getting hung-up on the numbers. The "target" should be considered an
initial aim point... simply a spot to aim for (using the visual cues you describe) that will get you over obstructions and onto a usable surface that is long enough for you to roll out safely (or, for "advanced users", to the taxiway you want). Ideally, there should be no heavy braking, or taxiing to where you want to exit. To do this often requires ignoring the numbers, except to confirm the runway heading.
A spot of some kind is good, but it doesn't have to be the numbers, or the threshold. But whether or not it's the numbers, it's not about the glideslope itself, so much as it's about why
that glideslope, if you know what I mean. The PIC should decide what glideslope, based on where they want to be when the plane stops rolling. On an instrument approach, it's best to use the published glideslope, but even that one is designed merely to get you onto the maximum amount of usable runway while still clearing obstacles. I never got any use out of worrying about degrees of glideslope, etc... and a VASI or PAPI never made me land better without considering the "big picture" as a whole.
-The "flare" or "roundout":
I was taught to "hold it there" (elevator), not "pull back" at the critical moment... encouraging use of up elevator at 50 AGL for every landing in a light airplane is not wise, IMHO. I've never made a satisfactory landing that way, in any airplane under any circumstances. Made some crappy ones, though- it's a reliable technique for crappy "arrivals", for sure.
Dudley is right in pointing out that "hold it there" shouldn't mean "freeze", but I'm talking about letting the airplane land by arriving with basically the right pitch angle and airspeed vs. forcing it to land with elevator input from some specific altitude. Naturally, conditions will require small adjustments.
"Flying it on" is not always good, either... it's kinda cool when you say "gosh- I didn't even feel that!" but
if that's not what you were expecting, you did it wrong. If it was, well, good for you. But it shouldn't be a surprise. Positive, conscious control of the descent and landing is the only worthy goal, IMHO... that mindset prepares you for the unexpected, or landings in challenging conditions.
To summarize:
I never had much luck "aiming for the numbers" and "flaring"; I started making better landings when I aimed for
the spot I wanted, kept it from moving in my field of view, and made sure my airspeed, height and sink rate were appropriate when I arrived there. No more, no less. Works in any airplane, under any conditions... I think everyone here will agree with that.
That is very simplistic, but it serves well enough, because only practice, adhering to these basic principles, makes for consistently good landings.
-Anyway, that's just my 2 cents' worth, and I don't claim to know anything nobody else knows, nor do I claim that I will never break an airplane trying to land it.
"My worst landing ever is yet to come" is my mantra... much more honest than "I know what I need to know to never make a bad landing", and it is a mindset that has helped me make better landings.