Hammer wrote:I don’t think stiff gear makes an airplane “bounce”. I think stiff gear makes the transition from flying to rolling more critical because the wings’ AOA changes quicker and with more latitude when the gear isn’t soaking up some of the landing impact, and it’s the wing that’s lifting the airplane off the ground much more so than the gear. No doubt the gear has some input, but I don't think it's that much. Land tail-low in a three point, where the tailwheel touches before the mains, and there isn’t much of a bounce…even with a real smack-down landing. I believe that’s because all the bounce is coming from the gear, not an increase in AOA.
The the best anti-bounce procedure I've found (assuming proper airspeed) is to dump the Johnson bar at touchdown. In any but the strongest cross winds I land with full flaps, and never less that 20 degrees. My wing will fly MUCH slower with flaps down than up.
Any airspeed that will allow me to wheel land in cross winds or gusty winds will also make the wing fly again if I go to 3-point without retracting the flaps. No "bounce" involved necessarily…just back to flying when the angle of attack increases. Big tires and a STOL kit are no doubt contributing factors. Flap gap seals (I know…tools of the devil) may also influence it…never flown without them so I don’t know. But I run out of rudder before I run out of lift in the three point attitude.
If I want to land tail-low without dealing with the flaps I have to really stick the yoke forward as soon as I touch to keep the tail from going any lower. While this works fine, it also results in a lot of rock damage to the bottom of my elevator. My go-to cross-wind landing procedure is to wheel land as slow as my rudder will allow, then dump the flaps without moving the yoke. As the flaps come up the center of lift moves forward and the tail comes down, and the flight part of the landing is over. I can also roll along on the mains with the tail high while speed bleeds off, but assuming cross or gusty winds, that’s hardly the most stable configuration.
Slight subject drift, but another great way to save your landings is to stay off the pavement. Grass and dirt are so much more forgiving, especially in strong cross winds. I’ve scouted out appropriate off-pavement landing sites adjacent to my hometown paved runway, and that has allowed me to land several times in conditions I when couldn’t have landed on the pavement. It gives the airport busybodies conniption fits, but then again so does everything else…
This is probably more accurate for my night landings I talked about than my initial observation of landing with too high a sink rate. Thinking back, I was tail-low wheeling it on. A vertical descent when the mains hit would cause a rotation about the mains, increasing the AoA. Good call. My one night 3-point I did was at a higher speed than usual and looking back at my video it looks like I might have hit the mains a RCH before the tail, giving a small AoA increase at a flying speed. I'm ok with my performance right now, as it was the first time I'd done any night TW landings. But I'll get better

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I have noticed that dropping it in with a tail-first landing there isn't any real bounce to speak of.
I'll try dumping flaps on my next daylight low weight patterns and see how that works. On my last landing back at HSV the other night, I dumped flaps on the roll-out, after I was stabilized on the mains. I was surprised to notice the tail did want to drop and required more forward yoke to keep it up. Looking back that shouldn't have been a surprise, I just hadn't thought about the CoP moving as I decreased wing camber. It was the first time I'd dumped flaps in a TD with the tail up. Owning this plane has been such an education!
I like your idea about saying away from ass-falt. I'd love to find a hangar on a grass strip around here!