EDowning wrote:
A more important thought is this, cruise is 130 mph, flap speed 110, approach speed 95, stall at 72. Not a lot of room in an airplane that virtually rolls on its back when stalled, weighs what a T6 does and has 160hp less hence almost no go around capability normally and certainly, no go around capability when its hot out.
All valid points...and the fact that you could explain them to me in about three paragraphs means that the Yale isn't some crazy machine that will just kill you at any time. It has defined areas of the envelope that you can describe on the ground and show to me in flight.
The point of my post was not if the Yale was a good or bad training airplane vis a vis the T-6. Clearly it has handling properties that are not all that desirable. But is it "unexpected"?
Is it this big mystery that students will wait to happen unannounced? That's really the point of my earlier post -- bad handling characteristics are known and can be taught around.
With respect to teaching students on an airplane with some bad manners, I guess the difference is the military training philosophy -- in all the aircraft I've ever learned to fly, there is an "Advanced Handling Characteristics" portion of the training. That whole point of AHC is to go out and find those parts of the flight envelope where the airplane does something that is surprising, or different, or dangerous. You expose a new pilot to it right from the start -- explain what it's going to look and smell like, then go out to the airplane and go see it for yourself up at altitude where there is much less danger.
That way, you know what flight regimes are to be avoided, and if you get yourself there, you know what to do to get out of it.
So, you don't end up with someone who says, "oh, I hope I never pull to an accelerated stall in the final turn, because the airplane will roll over and die."
Instead, you have someone who has DONE exactly that up at altitude, who knows that there is no buffett warning, who knows what some of the other characteristics of approaching an accelerated stall are, and knows what a nasty stall it produces. That pilot will thus perch wider, keep their speed up, etc, go around when there is any question about overshooting the runway.
Does this make a narrow margin for error? Absolutely -- nobody is saying it doesn't. But that is the nature of flying airplanes, isn't it?