Spot Landing Competition Rules
We all like fun, Dan, that's why we fly without engines!
Your story is tragic (and I don't know if I would have enjoyed flying your LS-6 knowing its history). But a fatal overrun is not an argument against making landings on a precise spot.
I wish you safe flying, too.
-John, Q3
On Friday, December 19, 2014 6:30:13 PM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote:
I like having fun, too!
OBTW, in the early 90s I bought an LS-6a restored from wreck.* The
previous owner had gone through a fence on a landout.* He died at
the scene.
Safe flying!
Dan
On 12/19/2014 12:16 PM, John Carlyle
wrote:
It comes down to what you want to emphasize, Dan.
If your goal is to train pilots to land a ship safely in a small field, I'd argue that it's more important to be able to land on a specific mark rather than be able to stop before an arbitrary mark. Reasoning - landing short of the field (or hitting a tree before landing) is liable to be more injurious to the pilot than doing a slow speed ground loop.
If your goal is just to meet the FAA PTS, then of course you must emphasize stopping before an arbitrary mark.
-John, Q3
On Friday, December 19, 2014 1:50:33 PM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote:
As I recall (it's been a long time), my Commercial check ride
required me to stop short of the fence, not within a few feet
beyond.* It was barbed wire, BTW, and I was not very happy with
being put in that spot.* The examiner was an FAA guy and had not
done a glider check ride in a long time and probably never in such a
high performance ship as a Twin Lark.* Why not add training value to
the spot landing contest by assessing a 100% penalty for passing the
mark?
On several trips to Roach Dry Lake south of Jean, NV, they have a
circle outlined on the lake bed within which to stop.* It was a lot
of fun to shoot for the center of the circle.* The 1-26 and 2-33
usually won but I did manage to stop in the circle a couple of times
in my LAK!
On 12/19/2014 10:51 AM, John Carlyle
wrote:
Wouldn't that be a "spot stopping contest" rather than a "spot landing contest, Dan?
-John, Q3
On Friday, December 19, 2014 11:14:33 AM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote:
I always thought the target was a brick wall at the end of the landing zone. The penalty for crossing it would be heavy!
Dan Marotta
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Dan Marotta
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Dan Marotta
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