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On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 16:10:03 -0700, "Bob Gardner"
wrote: I have to agree with Bob. (My apologies Bob) I'd be inclined to agree with him...once the airplane is airborne and cleaned up, the skills to steer it and adjust altitude are pretty much what you learn in a 152.....and you don't have to worry about the rudders. Nor are you worried about holding altitude or course. So what if you exceed some limitations. Are they going to use the airplane again? You aren't worried about the 100 MPH mind in a 500 MPH airplane either. There is a big difference between piloting an airplane and just hitting a target with it. The second one darn near missed. I could fly the Deb straight and level the first time I got in it, but it took me a few hours to learn the momentum difference and it took several hundred hours to really know the airplane. I find 8 to 10 year old kids who have been "flying" on sims can take over the controls on the Deb. With only a little coaching they can do straight and level as well as coordinated turns. That is a lot better than most Cessna 150 and 172 pilots, or Cherokee pilots do, particularly if they have a few hundred hours. The pilots typically have it in a 2G PIO in less than a minute. Of course covering the VSI helps :-)) The point is: If you are not afraid of stalling, not afraid of holding altitude, not afraid of breaking the airplane, or getting hurt, no intention of getting out alive, and your only goal is going from some point A to B and crashing into B after some one else had done the take off and climb, it's not that difficult a goal. Hopefully it's more difficult now days, but not because the plane is difficult to fly. Probably less difficult than learning to safely solo in a 172. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Bob Gardner |
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