samiam wrote:In Barry Schiff's books/essays, he writes a lot about the skidding turn induced spin. It not only happens during the "impossible turn" scenario seen here, but also if you overshoot the base to final turn and try to cheat by adding more rudder. Definitely NOT the same stall we were all taught in primary training (in terms of warning signs, recovery, etc)
In the early days of aviation there were a good number of stall-spin accidents on the turn to final. Some aircraft were more susceptible that others, due to different airfoil characteristics. While we, the aviation community, are much more aware of the situation these days, the accidents continue to occur.
Some airplanes are way more forgiving than others in this scenario, but in all cases the situation is something to be avoided. Stalls close to the ground, even the good old stalls like we were taught in primary flight training, are not something to be trifled with. Keep the ball in the center an the plane won't spin! Always be aware of what's going on and keep flying the airplane.