I had the pleasure of flying and landing in formation with the Loco Vida
also,
and he does make it sound easy.  But as he mentions, practice makes
perfect!
Al

Mi Vida Loca wrote:

> I've read everybody's postings here on technique and the difficulties of
> landing the Coupe and have to put my 2 cents in again. First there is no
> substitute for skill and second you will never develop skill until you
know
> how the aircraft will behave throughout the speed envelope. Even when
> flying an approach in formation I (make that we) do not fly the standard
> stabilized approach. Especially when flying solo I never fly a
stabilized
> approach. In most cases I will constantly bleed off speed all the way
down
> final and will normally turn base to final about 1/4 mile from the touch
> down point. At my home field this means turning base at the numbers if
no
> one is ahead of me in the pattern. I also may fly a reverse speed
pattern,
> one in which I my speed is just above a stall (I have a Forney which
will
> stall) for a steep approach. I can fly as steep  or steeper approach as
any
> Cessna you just have to be ready to dump the nose as the ground is
rushing
> up at you. Don't count on being able to give it a shot of power to
arrest
> the sink rate, if it coughs you are in deep shit. To show how
controllable
> a coupe is Bill and I landed in formation (as is our custom) one day
during
> a spot landing contest. Bill being in the lead controls where we will
land,
> My mains are roughly 25 feet back from his. He chose to make me look
good
> by placing me within 3 feet of the spot. Had we paid the entry fee we
would
> have won. We probably would have won even if he had bracketed us on the
> spot. Low time or high time learn the whole envelope or whatever
aircraft
> you are flying some day you may not have the luxury of thousands of feet
of
> unobstructed concrete to land on.
>
> Dave
> 41 Charlie
> Dave's Ercoupe Page
> http://www.flash.net/~dmprosvc/dave



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