JRStripe wrote:I read something somewhere sometime about a modification the Blue Angles made to their F/A-18s. They add a spring to pull the stick forward. The reasoning is their pilot is able to make more precise adjustments to a force that is in one direction instead alternating back and forth between pushing and pulling. Maybe that feeling of better control is the human factor that causes pilots to add a little nose-down trim when landing.
There's a null point when moving the stick. In order to fly precisely in close formation, the spring/bungee was added to always have forward pull on the stick, causing the pilot to always have an aft, constant pull on the stick to eliminate the null point. Increasing back pressure or releasing back pressure always resulted in minute control movement and precise control.
Some airplanes will tolerate landing out of trim and others will not. Someone once showed me the "missionary position" on the stab trim in my 185, i.e. not trimming for the landing and having to constantly pull on the yoke. Being in the habit of flying airplanes that absolutely required trim to speed or suffer loss of elevator authority, and airplanes that responded to finesse with an on trim condition, my landings were terrible.
I trim, regardless of the airplane I'm flying...and I have better results. The best answer? It depends on the airplane(s) you fly and what your technique is, but I teach trimming to speed. How many times do you go around vs. landing? Trim for the odds.