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On Dec 16, 10:41 pm, "F. Baum" wrote:
On Dec 16, 2:03 pm, " wrote: : Dick Collins recommends flying approaches fast ("the runways are usually long..") Thoughts? Dick Collins has been past editor of Flying as well as AOPA Pilot. He's been a GA fixture for years and I am in no position to gainsay his extensive experience (10,000 plus in GA airplanes). There is no specific POH guidance for IAPs. What specifically his Dick Collins written that is Controversial? Contriversial was probably not a good word choice. How about unorthodox. All I can remember from the article is that this Tom B did most of the series (And not very well ) and there were side bars by Collins about all of the corners he cuts while flying IFR. If you consider the fact that there could be some low time pilots reading the magazine, it is probably not a good idea to brag about how much stuff you can get away with. It has been awhile since I have done much teaching and as I recall, I never set out to teach people to cut corners. This is what I found to be unorthodox. The only other thing I can remember about the guy was a few less than accurate editorials. I understand Flying has a new guy in there now, but I would still take any of these " How To" piloting articles with some healthy sceptisism. BTW how are you aware of Collins backround and experience. Do you know him personally ? FB Unorthodox is probably a much better word choice. Then we're talking about differences in practice, not mere right and wrong. I don't know Dick Collins personally (though I'd like to have lunch and do a brain dump at some point), but I've read several of his books. I read Flying when I was a kid (whenever I could scrape together the $1.50 and had enough time over lunch to run down to the drug store. Later I learned that the drug store was also popular since it stocked Playboy -- behind the counter, of course. I still bought Flying.) Dick Collins has over 8,000 hours in a 210, plus thousands more in others. He's been around GA for a long time and his father (Leighton Collins) wrote a fairly good book about flying (entitled Takeoffs and Landings but it covers far more than that). While the article may have suggested cutting corners, I haven't found that in his books. What -- In My Humble Opinion -- he does very well is help help the reader cross the chasm from FAA dogma (read Written and Practical) to real world practice. While some may say these are shortcuts, I think instead this knowledge leans towards the art that follows any skill. While I agree "new pilots" should be wary and perhaps even ignore some advice, you can't sell magazines (nor should you!) that tiptoes around every possible item that may screw over a newbie. In fact, at some point every pilot needs to develop judgment -- and that is the skill and art of winnowing out the wheat from the chaff. I'm always wary of protection schemes. Dan |
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