In the process of making the agency look good, agents are less likely to fault prescribed training techniques as contributing factors in accidents, especially fatal accidents. All go around accidents I am familiar with were fatal. Distractions, controller error, conditions, ect. were cited as contributing factors, but the cause was always error by the same pilot who was trained to pitch up to near stall pitch attitude believing altitude rather than maneuvering airspeed was safety.
On the go around, the ACS continues the call for Vx or Vy as appropriate immediately after full power. Ten years of crossing major airports on pipelines convinced me that default pitching up was far more dangerous than first leveling the airplane while going full power. From a 200' AGL patrol perspective, climbing into traffic made no sense and would have ticked off the controller who was telling airline pilots, "he's fifty feet off the trees. He's not traffic."
Yes, tower and/or see and avoid may clear the way up. But, other than immediate obstructions, there should be no hurry to get up. Where does this hurry to get up come from?
Upset and loss of control often begin with unplanned situations like those that trigger the go around. Stall results from the pilot's pulling back on the stick. Landing problem leads to go around power and immediate pitch up leads to stall, loss of control, and uncontrolled flight into terrain.
As pilot in command, we do not have to pitch up. We can simply go to full power, level the aircraft, and sort things out. As pilot in command, we do not have to immediately turn to a crosswind leg. There is no procedure turn altitude. There is no procedural track. The IMC missed approach is actually safer because neither Vx nor Vy is appropriate. Rather, we pitch just a bar width up on the AH and fly a pre-planned course.
Would it not be safer for the ACS to call for full power, level the aircraft to accelerate to maneuvering airspeed, clean up as necessary, and then climb at Vx or Vy as appropriate now with zoom reserve? If we have waited until near or after touchdown, low ground effect can improve acceleration.
I think we ambush students with indoctrination that go around is a normal maneuver. It is a low altitude emergency which should trigger maneuvering flight orientation. Encouragement to go around early in the approach should be paired with serious airspeed control, making go around truely the emergency procedure it is. If our students cannot reliably get a trainer down in three thousand feet consistently, we have an approach airspeed problem that cannot be fixed with continuous go arounds. "No more than 1.3 Vso " helps only if we teach throttle movement to mitigate gust spread instead of increasing ground speed In a headwind. Why are there more overruns and go around fatalities in strong headwinds? That math makes no sense at all.
