Back in the '70s when the colleges and universities all had flight schools
we used to have an annual competition on just this sort of precision flying
and planning. Leaning for proper speed and power was essential because it
was not unusual for the difference between first and second place to be
measured in seconds deviation from planned time enroute and tenths of
gallons of deviation from planned fuel burn.
We also used to have spot landing contests which were usually won by the
pilot that hit the exact spot the most times out of three or six or how many
ever it took to separate first and second place. Those damn chalk lines were
only about 3" wide - we used a baseline marker to lay them on the runway.
The two lines were 3 or 4 inches apart and the trick was to miss the first
line and hit the second so the target spot was only about 6 or 7 inches
wide.
--
Jim Carter
Rogers, Arkansas
"Judah" wrote in message
. ..
....
Unless someone cheats by leaning.