dirtstrip wrote:Still, the key defense argument of "I always three point" is at that one single point in time where both techniques intersect, that point when the tail stops flying in a wheelie and finally touches on the ground.
Negative... and the notion that you may as well 3pt because you have to end up there sooner or later is flawed as well.
The two extremes (wheel and 3pt) only intersect if you choose to land them at the same approach profile and change only the AOA at impact...

As GT pointed out in the extreme case you can fly your tail clear to 0 mph and then set your tail down. Try landing 3 point at 0 mph , now that's an intersection of the two I'd like to see...
silvaire wrote:...but I still have this one thing that bugs me and that is the idea that you somehow have better control over crosswinds with a wheel landing.
... By design, every one of our airplanes is required to retain elevator authority enough to stall the wing. And by design, your rudder simply will not stall under any landing configuration. That means your elevator will continue to fly, up down or however you choose in between, long after your wing has signed off. Ditto for your rudder. You have given up your wing in a full stall landing (of course that's the intention). When you full stall, by definition you limit the elevator to holding down the tail.... that's it... over.. no more elevator. Crosswind? Oh... now your ailerons are pegged and by now who knows what your rudder is doing?
Conversely, wheeling you continue to use your elevator, for as much or as little as you choose. One more tool back out of the box. As many have pointed out, and even a few in mockery, you can use your tail to maintain what the wing is doing clear to the stop. Now should you elect to go around, you have a control that is not locked and down, but already in play. In my not so humble opinion, parking the elevator at a stop is tantamount to parking the throttle at a stop. And here again, nothing wrong with landing deadstick (I do it for fun and even practice occasionally) But in pure terms of efficiency and certainly with regards to engine handling, it is probably not the optimum.
IMHO if a person can not understand how a rudder in clear air provides more control than a rudder in blocked air, then they are probably a tad rusty in keeping the rudder in that clean air... nothing wrong with that, just the way it is... On the other hand if a person feels their rudder is not as effective as their tail wheel, well that's a whole different story. On some airplanes it may even be the case, but even in the odd ducks I've flown with better wheel than rudder steering, I haven't met any that couldn't be landed however suited a pilot or circumstance best.
So to get back to the OP's very first post, my personal opinion of a pilot who see's any particular landing style / regime as superior to any other is that said pilot is just limited in his experience of other stuff out there... Again nothing wrong with that, but I have come to learn you can discover a lot more about a person just letting them talk, than they could ever convince you of otherwise
Take care, Rob