I'm not a 180/185 driver. I don't think I've ever ridden in one. So I won't begin to know what's the best way to land one. Heck, although I'm a "legal" tailwheel pilot without needing an endorsement (not legal to carry passengers, obviously, without 3 full stop landings), I admit to being a poor excuse as a tailwheel pilot.
But I do have some strong thoughts about touch and goes and go arounds. In my opinion, speaking as a pilot who has been around the barn for awhile and as a former instructor, they are two entirely different things. Practicing T&Gs doesn't create the necessary skills for a go around. Practicing T&Gs doesn't do very much of anything, other than allow more landings to be crammed into a short period of time, but at a higher risk. Practicing T&Gs might allow a pilot to get good at T&Gs, but other than for practice, how much of flying actually involves T&Gs? If I sit and watch a batch of students do T&Gs for a couple hours, a huge percentage won't slow the airplane down to much under flying speed before pouring the coals to it--and that's not a real landing. A real landing involves touching down, and most importantly maintaining control while slowing to taxi speed. The NTSB files are replete with examples of LOC during the transition from flying speed to taxi speed. Why? I surmise it's because many of the pilots haven't practiced a crucial skill, transforming a flying machine into a ground machine.
Practicing real go arounds, on the other hand, is genuinely useful to develop a necessary skill. Granted that we don't often have to go around, but when we do, we have to do it right. Doing a go around right is entirely different from doing a T&G. In a T&G, typically the airplane is reconfigured for the departure while rolling on the ground, typically at a speed just below lift off speed. But in a go around, power is applied first--and frankly, except for those singles that tend to torque roll on a full power application at slow speeds, most of the time that should be full power. Whether manual or electric flaps, as soon as the power is fully applied, get the flaps up part way, typically half way, to reduce drag. That's true for every single I've flown, and perhaps true for most of them. Then immediately retrim to help get the nose down by reducing the pressure on the yoke. None of that takes long--a few seconds at most--if true go arounds have been practiced at all. But the pilot can't sit there, waiting for things to happen. Especially if the pilot doesn't have the strength to overcome the yoke, getting retrimmed right away is essential.
Incidentally, an important part of any go around is deciding to go around. That's something that needs to be practiced, as well.
So what do I do, personally, to be reasonably good at go arounds? Well, I don't do touch and goes. I've maybe done one or two in the time I've owned my current airplane, which is almost 15 years. I've done a lot of taxi-backs, but not touch and goes. I've done several practice go arounds each year, perhaps half a dozen, from different places in the approach, including almost touching down.
I've done perhaps a total of half a dozen go arounds for real in that time, for one reason or another. Only one did I consider to be a marginal example. It was one in which I made the decision pretty late, at a high DA (close to 10,000') with a heavy airplane, and although I firewalled the throttle, the airplane continued to settle and actually touched down before climbing out. In my post flight analysis, something I do after almost every flight, I chastised myself only for the late decision (and not noticing the change in wind direction sooner). Everything else was done just the way it should be done.
Cary