Come on Kent, you're gonna liken inverted flight to unusual attitudes? There is a little tiny difference...you're upside down!
Ever been upside down in an airplane? Lemme tell ya, there is a STRONG urge to right yourself, and it really takes no thought to get those ailerons out there to do so in a hurry. Proper unusual attitude recovery techniques will work even if you're inverted, too.
Perhaps, but without training on how to avoid the towers, then we're not specifically training every possible scenario anymore.
Oh come on. Something's in front of you. Turn left, turn right, climb, whatever. A monkey could figure out building avoidance. Then again, it's not that hard to read the MEF's for your route and stay above them either.
Afterall, if someone had taught building avoidance to Lidle....
Maybe they should have taught him airplane avoidance.
Yes. PPs are told how to avoid spins, and shown to keep the rudders level. But if one enters a spin? Screw him, he should have paid more attention during the training, he gets to die?
Not if he was paying attention. Spins require two things: Uncoordinated flight and a stall. So... Fly coordinated, and don't stall, and there's no way you can spin. Part of the reason the various maneuvers are valuable is to teach how to fly coordinated and not stall in various flight regimes. Steep turns, for example, can teach you the effect of turns on a stall.
Since we're advocating teaching pilots how to avoid every scenario, lets teach them spins too.
We're not teaching pilots how to avoid every scenario. We're teaching them mastery of the airplane.
Ask around, what the hardest parts of the PP training was. Most people will say the majority of time was spent learning to land properly (which is necessary, obviously), followed by either S-turns or Steep turns, and the rest of the ground reference after that.
Again, are you kidding? I'd bet money that power-on stalls are way above steep turns and ground reference maneuvers in the list of most people's difficulties after landing.
For those who have no desire to learn more, they're gonna be stuck as mediocre pilots, under the current system, or under the good system.
No... They'd be mediocre pilots under the "good" system. Under the current system, they're mediocre non-pilots.
Only one friend, and I'm not aware of any night flight allowed with LSA, and I believe recreational is limited to 50nm. Who wants to fly like that?
Not me... But that's why additional training (ahem) allows you to move from Rec or Sport up to Private.
Riiight, because not knowing how to do a turn around a point will suddenly make their airplanes plummet out of the sky.
Frankly, anyone who can't do a turn around a point is not flying an airplane, the airplane is flying them. It's a simple maneuver that simply takes an understanding of the factors involved (winds aloft and groundspeed) which need to be known anyway. It also teaches division of attention (ground track, traffic watch, altitude check, lather, rinse, repeat.)
cheaper tie down spots, cheaper hangars
Demand goes way up, supply has trouble keeping up. You really think they're gonna get cheaper?
I will grant you that we need more pilots. Making it *easier* is not the way to go. Making it *cheaper* is. There's already too many bad pilots who have slipped through the cracks in our current system, and you want to make those cracks bigger? That will simply lead to more accidents, higher insurance costs, bad press, bad public perception, more closed airports...
Flying is a challenge. As such, getting the certificate should be a challenge. Not overly challenging, but enough to keep the people who would not be good pilots OUT. This is not "elitist" it's realist. The people who shouldn't be pilots... Well, shouldn't be pilots!
I'm sure my perspective on this is somewhat colored by the people I have to work with on a regular basis. I never knew how many stupid losers there were in the world until I was a truck driver trainer. I try to take all my trainees flying at some point or another, and while some of them would be OK pilots, the majority would not. Yeah, I really love hearing what a great time they had when they call all their friends and family and talk about it, but it makes me cringe when I hear a guy who doesn't even know which way north, south, east, and west are talk about how he's gonna be a pilot someday too. (And then spaces out and doesn't realize he missed the turn to I-65 south until TOLEDO, 220 miles further down the road, and gets into an accident trying to get back on track.)
More pilots would be great. Handing out pilot certificates like driver's licenses would NOT.