asa wrote:Why not just get instruction in your plane? I doubt you’ll be able to many if any CFI’s with time in that type but slow taildraggers are normally just slow taildraggers. Maybe just find an instructor with time operating the kind of engine that is in it in an LSA.
JP256 wrote:asa wrote:Why not just get instruction in your plane? I doubt you’ll be able to many if any CFI’s with time in that type but slow taildraggers are normally just slow taildraggers. Maybe just find an instructor with time operating the kind of engine that is in it in an LSA.
Don't get me wrong. I love LSAs (heck, I just bought a Rans S-6ES Coyote II – see my avatar), but naively thinking "slow taildraggers are just slow taildraggers" can bite you – hard! There is a lot of discussion about this in the Light Sport world. One of the recurring things you hear about Light Sport accidents and incidents is that the pilot had significant background in "regular" GA flying (or worse yet, the airline flying world) and thought "It's just another airplane. I know how to fly. I don't need no stinkin' training..." Then they go out and have an accident.
AOPA, EAA, and LAMA (Light AIrcraft Manufacturer's Association) all strongly recommend some transition training for pilots moving to LSA, especially those LSA that are towards the "ultralight" end of the scale. Because, like the good old J-3 Cub, they fly just slow enough to get you to the scene of the accident...
Find an instructor who has experience flying something with very similar characteristics to the Capella XS, and get your training from them. Your insurance carrier (and your family) will thank you. That's why I suggested Rocky Mountain Kitplanes earlier. It's where this 2000-hour Commercial/Instrument rated pilot is headed to get trained on the Rans...
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