bdk wrote:
airnutz wrote:
...lots of ground-loop and ground-accidents due to the failure to meet the demands of the reduced visibility from the cabin.
No, lots of ground-loop and ground-accidents from poor pilots failing to meet the demands of any taildragger aircraft or get the proper training. The plane is blind to the right (for the pilot) but very good to the left. You can even stick your head out of the roll-down window (probably not a good idea on landing though).
The plane is top heavy and has a lot of momentum, a situation that lots of taildraggers share. Mine had the heavy gear, I suspect that the light gear would worsen this situation. Never flew one with the crosswind gear, but some love it, others hate it. Never met someone who was in-between.
Thanks BDK for passing on your insight of experience!
Yeahh...I was afraid tat run-on sentence was going to come back and bite
me. That was the 2nd time that morning that I attempted to post comment
on the 195. The 2nd version which you read was a bit too condensed as I
was trying to beat, yet another "connection lost" boot off the net. Courtesy
of my local phone monopoly who assures me ....blah..blah..blah..
I haven't had a clear line till now..maybe...
Anyway, what I originally said were comments culled from the P&P article
offered as lead-ins to the link. The article warned, if one was looking to
own a 195 to be careful..many were damaged in ground-loops and others
in ground accidents. Inspect carefully before you buy. Every machine has
it's limitations and needs..some folks fail to realize this and the machine
suffers. Caveat emptor...