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On Mar 14, 2:40 pm, Deadstick wrote:
I haven't done any instructing recently, but when I did, I taught slow flight, stall recognition and avoidance AND stall entry & recovery. I don't think they have be be exclusive of one another. Plus I think learning to recognize and avoid stalls is probably a better risk-management strategy given that it can be easily learned and mastered by pilots of all skill levels. In principle I agree that ALL pilots should be fully competent at slow airspeeds and at recovering from stalls, but I would also tend to say that there's a lot more that we can teach pilots before we set them free to fly on their own. I am curious as to the meaning of the phrase "..dragging it in". As in "...he turned on final, dragging it in". I knew a pilot at A&M who died in a C182 while "dragging it in". I assumed at the time that this was slow flight and without further details could only assume that he inadvertently stalled the plane at some point. I also inferred that this phrase could also say "was behind the power curve". Any thoughts would be appreciated. (IIRC, he did not spin in). Richard |
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