Agreed on the better AOA afforded by bigger tires and extended gear.
I drew a very different conclusion watching his video. While he in fact appeared to have an increased ground roll using techniques that have helped others
shorten their ground roll, I cloud not come up with the conclusion that the others were wrong. The conclusion that was more obvious to me was that he simply hadn't mastered the other techniques.
I have personally watched too many people slam their tail in to the ground while trying to do a flap jump. Slow motion video of this happening in a supercub is exceptionally telling, as on many cubs the fabric between the ribs will ballon when loaded. When such a plane has the tail hit the ground on take off roll you can actually watch the balloons deflate (in other words the wing unload) only to have to start the process all over again, consequently lengthening the ground roll. It doesn't mean the technique doesn't work, it just means they fubar'd it.
RKTX's video was a good example of how performed correctly, his (RKTX's) technique
will shorten the roll, watched in slo mo you can see he just kisses the ground with the t/w. Which to me says that even though he's already debunked the AOPA video, he
might even be able to get it shorter
In the AOPA video he doesn't appear to hit the ground with the tail, but watching the inside footage over a few times, it appears he never quite gets the airplane 'on the step' and consequently has very little rotating to do. He appears to be essentially just willy nilly yanking flaps from a very low attitude followed by a weak rotation... In his case simpler is probably better, but as RKTX has shown, he's leaving performance on the table.
Having said all that, there is a lot of 'how they do it in Valdez' that just doesn't work for every application. Load your plane with a month worth of camping gear, and then try and lay the whip to it on a gravel bar from a standstill... Might be fine in a cub with 6" gear and 35's, but probably a piss poor idea in a 180 with a wood cored prop
Take care, Rob