PatínLoco wrote:I know, I know ... not this again... What's your preference, and what would you have told him?
I'm thrilled you resurfaced this. I've been wanting to, but now I don't have to be the villain. Thanks.
So anyone who knows me, or has read my pontifications on this subject knows I'm an ardent purveyor of 3-point landings (I include tail low wheelies). Especially in Stearmans, I've helped recover too many Stearman wrecks that occurred during wheel landings.
Anyway, don't tell anyone but I found a place for wheel landings. Yea I know, I was shocked too.
This epiphany took place while I was in Alaska pre-buy flying my SQ-2. The first day was all about 3 point and Valdez landings (one point drop-ins). The second day Randy (the SQ-2 builder/owner) asked me if I could do wheel landings. Sure, I just hardly ever do them.
Randy explained that while 3 point and Valdez landing were fine for gravel bars and relatively smooth surfaces, wheelies are the only way to land rough terrain, like logs and big rocks (neither of which I would land the 185 on which explains why I never considered them before) in order to protect the tailwheel. I could see that with the places the SQ-2 can land this made perfect sense.
So now I would wheel land the little gravel bars scattered on the Knick. I can do that. In my defense I have to say that the engine in the SQ-2 is set very low, enough that at level flight attitude I see no cowling at all so have no sense of how close the prop might be to the ground. And since it wasn't mine yet I was leery (read scared) of pushing the nose too far forward.
Shameless plug for my SQ-2
It was actually quite hilarious (and frustrating). Randy's conversation went something like this. "Okay looking good. Your four foot high, four foot. Push the nose over. Okay three foot. Push the nose over more. Three foot. Push the nose over." And woosh we were back over water again. This happened over and over and over and over and over until we reached the glacier.
I was really frustrated but Randy wasn't about to give up. "Okay, forget about landing. Can you fly the plane onto the bar and then just high speed taxi it along?" Sure, I can do that. So we took off, flew back to the beginning of the gravel bars and tried this new technique.
"Okay looking good. Now get the plane on the bar. Push the nose over. Two foot. Two foot." And woosh we were back over water again. But at the next bar I got the wheels on just before I ran out of bar, and each subsequent bar got better, till I was bar hoping with the best of them (in my mind anyway).
Since Randy is going to "Bust My Balls" when we bring the SQ-2 down I've included wheel landings in my 185, as well as "wheel bagging" river bottoms in preparation.
This is all a long winded way of my advice to your friend. "Learn both, then do what you like and what's best for your mission and the conditions." Helpful huh?!
