daleandee wrote:Scott Todd wrote:I had an opportunity to sell a Sonex years ago to an ultralight pilot that had never flown one. They asked if I'd teach them to land it so they could buy it and fly it home across the country. I refused knowing that this scenario was a ripe for an NTSB report. So we all might do the flying community a favor and let them know that these plans are easy to fly ... "when you learn how to do it."
radfordc wrote:daleandee wrote:I had an opportunity to sell a Sonex years ago to an ultralight pilot that had never flown one. They asked if I'd teach them to land it so they could buy it and fly it home across the country. I refused knowing that this scenario was a ripe for an NTSB report. So we all might do the flying community a favor and let them know that these plans are easy to fly ... "when you learn how to do it."
radfordc wrote:Dale, I was a high time UL pilot when I bought my Sonex. My only Sonex experience was a familiarization flight that consisted of three takeoffs and landings. I bought the plane and flew it home from Detroit to Kansas City. Probably not one of my best ADM moments. And yes, at the end of a long day of flying the last landing was a ground loop. I guess better lucky than smart.
XenosN42 wrote:This has been said before, but it never hurts to be repeated.
Glider training, or even better a rating will make you a better power pilot. It might take some effort but it’s worth it.
Many Sonex and experimental accidents happen after engine problems or failure. For many power pilots the first thing on the checklist is ‘panic’! For a glider pilot it’s OK I’ve done this before, let’s land.
I’ve been there. Early on flight testing my OneX the engine stopped on short final. (Idle cut off needed adjustment.) in hindsight I did everything right. Training shows. 1. I pulled the mixture to cutoff. 2. Landed the plane. 3. Coasted to a stop. 4. Started the engine and taxied back. All your glider training kicks in. I’d landed without an engine 100s of times. That was just one more time. No panic required.
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