what difference would it make for the student to learn on a Cub or a Pitts?
Getting your primary training on a tailwheel aircraft - any tailwheel
aircraft - makes a
huge difference because from their first hour,
they will be forced to learn how to use their feet to control the rudder,
which is not necessary on a nosewheel aircraft.
The stick & rudder skills developed in that first 10 hours will last
a lifetime - crosswind landings, for example, will come much easier.
FWIW I have soloed people on the Pitts. If you have the money,
and naturally great hands and feet, go for it. Even for the well-heeled,
I don't think the Pitts is the best choice for a primary trainer, because
so much of initial flight training is about confidence, or lack thereof ...
every student, struggling with their first landings, wonders if they can
really do this. And a Pitts sure won't make that any easier.
I found the Harvard to be a neat one
Everyone except me seems to gush about the T-6/SNJ/Harvard/
whatever-you-want-to-call-it. I've flown several models a
few times, and was underwhelmed. It's a big, heavy beast -
think of a tank with wings. Great sounds, very mediocre
performance. As a primary trainer, it's at least as bizarre a
choice as a Pitts - there are lots better, IMHO (cub, champ,
etc). But I shouldn't knock it too much, I guess - my father
did his first 250 hours or so of flight training on one, right
after WWII, so it must have worked for him.
Personally, I found the P-51 to be a lot more fun to fly than
a T-6. Not the best for acro, imho, though.
the student is going to gain a lot more out of learning
on a Luscombe, 180 or two hole biplane, each carries slightly
greater statistical risk on the solo flight
Not sure I agree with that. You could argue that
any
tailwheel aircraft is "riskier" for solo, but that doesn't mean
that you shouldn't use tailwheel aircraft for primary training.
What we so quickly gloss over is that
every person is
different. Wildly so. What one person struggles with,
another person will perform effortlessly. I know this doesn't
seem very egalitarian or fair, but that's often the way it is.
P.S. Yeah, the Ryan looks like a hoot. Gotta read up
on Kinnear radials before I go - don't know diddly
about them
Here's some more open-cockpit eye candy for you .... I
need to add it to my ICAS card, so I can start flying it at
airshows (not in Canada, of course, Transport! Of course,
I am "banned for life" from ever performing at airshows
in Canada. Thanks so much for your help arranging that,
Chris P.)
This is a BIG picture, dialup GTFO:
http://www.pittspecials.com/etc/stearman.jpg
It's got the R985
btw, photo credit of the Stearman to I_Reason,
who is a great guy, btw.