People here seem really excited when pilots land with the gear
up, but for some odd reason, nobody ever asks, "Why?"
I have a theory. Perhaps I am full of male bovine excrement,
but hear me out.
If we look at CAR 405.14:
http://www.tc.gc.ca/civilaviation/regse ... htm#405_14
it says:
Note that it says "shall". Not should, or oughta, or mostly, but "shall".Flight training ... shall be conducted in accordance with the applicable flight instructor guide
That's not optional.
If we then look at FIG:
http://www.tc.gc.ca/CivilAviation/gener ... actors.htm
I might observe that hardly anyone in Canada learns to fly on a(b) PRIMACY — Present new knowledge or skills correctly the first time. (Teach it right the first time.)
retractable gear aircraft. Not many student pilots fly retractable
gear aircraft.
And that's a pity. Because for the first TWO HUNDRED HOURS of
a pilot's career, they are taught to land without selecting gear down
And not bothering to lower the gear is a lesson - reinforced for
the FIRST TWO HUNDRED HOURS of their flying - which sticks
with them. And then everyone is shocked and appalled when
they revert to their ab initio training, and don't lower the gear.
Primacy? Anyone? Anyone?
Around page three of the "next gear up landing" thread, I asked my
kid - whom I taught to fly - what his downwind check was, on ANY
type of aircraft.
Without referring to a checklist, he recited:
Gas
Brakes
Undercarriage down
Mixture
Pitch
Flaps
Harness
Quaint, I know. Very british. But still, you can see that I'm
trying to apply the learning factor of Primacy as best I can.
Suggestion: If anyone really wants to cure this "gear up"
problem, use the learning factor of Primacy and install phony
gear up/down selectors in ab initio aircraft, so that students
are trained to select gear up and gear down from the very
first flight.
One would hope that such a device would not be considered
a "major mod", but you never know. I would suggest rigging
up a siren that would go off - and would stay on for 10 minutes -
if a student landed without selecting gear down - I can think of
several inexpensive ways of implementing that. Similarly, you
would want to punish a student who forgot to raise the
gear after takeoff. Again, I have some ideas.
Anyways. It troubles me that I am apparently the ONLY person
in the entire world - with internet access, anyways - that this has
EVER occurred to, which I find troubling. Am I paddling with only
one oar? Am I running on seven cylinders? Am I playing with
only 47 cards? Do I have PK screws on the floor?