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See the last paragraph........and smile.   Okay? 

Greg Bullough wrote: 


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Some timid people have chickened out on dropping the nose and diving
toward the runway as they approach the ground.  Theyve generally folded
under the nose gear and sometimes gotten more damage from that failure.


Too little too late, cuz once the sink is established, you need a good 50
or 
100 feet to sort it UNLESS you get on the power. 
  


The better alternative is to exercise really good approach control using
approach path and power to avoid needing to lose altitude fast.


Indeed! 
  


Well executed, you can always be within gliding range of the threshold yet
not too high.  Another tool is using a high bank angle from downwind to
base or base to final while chanting out loud, over and over, ONLY in a
Coupe, ONLY in a Coupe, ONLY in a Coupe, &.


We have a guy at our field who can do that in his Partenavia cabin-class
twin. 
  


I would assert that landing a Coupe well requires a higher skill level
than does a Spam Can because you cant slip to correct approach errors.


Yes, and after so many Koops pancaked, Cessna designed their 140-, 150-,
and 
170-series to forgive those errors and just plop down as if they had an
emergency 
chute. They went to school on us, in the quest for the safest airplane. 
  


Yet the low-airspeed/high-sink-rate trick is available if you need it,
also while reciting out loud, over and over, ONLY in a Coupe, ONLY in a
Coupe, ONLY in a Coupe, &.  :-)


Works okay in a 7ECA, too :-) If you're flying straight on long final, why
the hell not? 
It's not going to spin straight and level, and if you do stall it, it
isn't going to fall off 
one way or another (unless it's hideously out of rig, but you'd know that
because 
you were out flying twisties anyway). 


The 'sink' region is still well above the stall region in most planes, and
short-field approach 
speed is usually 1.1 Vso anyway. Hell, carrier pilots flew their
approaches at that speed 
all the time :-)


*****Yeah, but who ever said a Carrier Pilot was a 'good' pilot?  They
just fly it at the first cable and hope thier timing is correct with the
wave induced deck pitch.  I call that a 'lucky' pilot. 
    (In case there are any 'deck-jockies' out there, I'm just
kidding....Been watching too many episodes of  'JAG' on the TV I guess.) 
    Then on the other hand, I'd mount a slightly modified wire clothes
hangar on my tail tiedown loop and land my coupe on a carrier if that
would get me invited to some of the infamous 'Tail-Hook' parties.  Sounds
like fun to me.........     ;-) 

Bob 'Tailhooker' Saville (pun intended) 
N3396H   415C (slightly modified) 
Eugene, OR  (with no carriers in the area)      :-( 


BTW,  What's the length of the landing area on a carrier?  Just in case I
miss all the cables or my clothes hangar fails me?   (How many 'go-arounds
can I get?)   ;-) 


  

Greg======================================================================
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