mtv wrote:As to wheel landings being looked down on in the 40's--I thought it was the other way around. Ever see a P-51, P-40, P-47, C-46, C-47, Grumman G-21, etc three point land?? Probably won't either. Those were all 40's airplanes, and you won't find anyone who flies any of them that regularly does three points.
The reason for that, though is that none of those airplanes had STEERABLE tailwheels. If the tailwheel doesn't steer, there really isn't any reason to get in a hurry to put it on the ground, is there?
MTV
P-51s (and other WW-II fighters) were regularly 3-pointed back in the
40's & 50's+, but I agree you don't see many owners doing that these
days.
At the time, Naval fighters were typically operated out of huge fields (as
opposed to runways) and the Naval training syllabus taught 3-point
landings, and nothing else (this was for the SNJ).
The P-51 does have a steerable tailwheel. Any stick position aft of full
forward "locks" the tailwheel and allows steering while taxiing with rudder
input. Full forward stick unlocks the tailwheel and allows it to castor. The
P-40 has a castoring tailwheel. Don't know about the P-47 or the other
aircraft mentioned....
In any event, my opinion is that one should be able to 3-point or
wheel-land whatever taildragger one is flying (pilot's call...). In other
words, you put the controls wherever they need to go so the airplane
does what you want it to do!

(never let it do whatever it wants
to do!).