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![]() "Jose" wrote in message om... if the student is not ready to fly solo, he is not ready to taxi solo. I disagree. Actually flying an airplane, keeping it within its aviation envelope and reacting properly and swiftly should the aircraft approach the edge of its envelope, making a smooth approach to the runway at the proper speed, arriving sufficiently close to the desired touchdown point, arresting the descent smoothly and touching down gently enough to reuse the aircraft, and maintaining directional control on the ground at close to flying speed requires significantly more skill than taxiing on the ground, especially in a nosewheel. Jose This might not be the best analogy to make for this issue Jose. Naturally it takes more ability to accomplish all of these things than just the one skill of taxiing the aircraft on the ground. That isn't the issues here. The issue is instructor judgment. An accident is an accident whether it happens in the air or on the ground. It happens in aviation that one can easily kill someone with an airplane on the ground. Also, as I have stated in another post, there is the issue of responsibility transition as that applies to sound instruction procedure. Making a case for allowing a 2 hour student to taxi an airplane unsupervised is something you might want to revisit. Of course this is only my opinion. I can only say that I wouldn't have hired any instructor to work for me who would make this case. Dudley Henriques |
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