Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Friendliest aviation Ccmmunity on the web
  • Modern site for PC's, Phones, Tablets - no 3rd party apps required
  • Ask questions, help others, promote aviation
  • Share the passion for aviation
  • Invite everyone to Flightinfo.com and let's have fun

Is tailwheel endorsement really necessary?

Welcome to Flightinfo.com

  • Register now and join the discussion
  • Modern secure site, no 3rd party apps required
  • Invite your friends
  • Share the passion of aviation
  • Friendliest aviation community on the web

UA-RESURRECTED

Does this mean I failed?
Joined
Nov 3, 2005
Posts
126
Sure it can't hurt, but these days you could easily start from zero time to 777 captain without ever touching a tailwheeled airplane. So, is it really worth getting? Do you really need it if you're a career-minded pilot?


 
Its all up to you. Do you want to fly a tail wheel airplane??? If not, then no. If your going to be a flight instructor and might be teaching in a tail wheel, then you might want it. It all depends. I would say dont get it until you need it (or want it).
 
No matter how awesome a pilot thinks their skills are if they try to land a heavy tail dragger in a crosswind or even on a calm day he/she will undoubtedly be humbled. It is a totally different kind of flying that takes practice. People say once you have it it's easy. If you learn on one it should be easy. But if you have a few hundred hours in a C172 and give it a go you're ego will be crushed. Go try it in a 170 or 185 or something. You'll see.
 
Do it if you want to be a better pilot. You will learn what "seat of the pants" really means. I used to fly and instruct in a Cessna 120, that is when I really understood about using the rudders to keep it coordinated. I understood what adverse yaw was too. In that plane, if you tried to bank into a turn without using the rudder it would automatically yaw the wrong way while you banked and you would pretty much continue in an uncoordinated straight line. It was as McJohn put it a "humbling" experience. It was also the most rewarding flying I've ever done. I got my endorsement in a 150hp Super Cub. It was, to me, a lot easier to keep under control on the takeoff roll than the 120 which had 85hp. In the Super Cub if you ever got out of shape on the ground, all you had to do was add full power and you were airborne right now. The 120 was gutless and required you to drive it down the runway for quite some time before it gathered up the speed to liftoff. This, in my opinion, made the 120 a better tailwheel trainer, it just took more skill to stay out of trouble. If you want to do something challenging and really fun and become a far better stick and rudder, go find an "experienced" tailwheel instructor and get the endorsement.
 
sleddriver71 said:
Do it if you want to be a better pilot. You will learn what "seat of the pants" really means. I used to fly and instruct in a Cessna 120, that is when I really understood about using the rudders to keep it coordinated. I understood what adverse yaw was too. In that plane, if you tried to bank into a turn without using the rudder it would automatically yaw the wrong way while you banked and you would pretty much continue in an uncoordinated straight line. It was as McJohn put it a "humbling" experience. It was also the most rewarding flying I've ever done. I got my endorsement in a 150hp Super Cub. It was, to me, a lot easier to keep under control on the takeoff roll than the 120 which had 85hp. In the Super Cub if you ever got out of shape on the ground, all you had to do was add full power and you were airborne right now. The 120 was gutless and required you to drive it down the runway for quite some time before it gathered up the speed to liftoff. This, in my opinion, made the 120 a better tailwheel trainer, it just took more skill to stay out of trouble. If you want to do something challenging and really fun and become a far better stick and rudder, go find an "experienced" tailwheel instructor and get the endorsement.

Great information thanks. I know what you mean. I fly a Cherokee-140, and I will honestly admit, right here on this forum, to not using ANY rudder in turns. The plane is simply so forgiving...coordinated turns all day long without even the slightest rudder input. I use the rudder mostly on takeoff, and taxi of course.
 
It's like a helicopter rating...fun but not necessary for the typical fixed wing professional.

If you have limited time and/or money, spend it on something more directly career or family enhancing (instructor rating, ATP written, etc.)
 
If a person learns to fly a tailwheel airplane and particularly if they learn to master wheel landings, that person will be able to land every airplane better, even large airline types of equipment like the B777. By learning wheel landings the pilot develops a peripheral sense of sink rate and height above the runway that applies to all airplanes. Sounds hard to believe but it does work. I know this to be true.

Non tailwheel pilots are now qualified to reply to this thread. Such pilots don't have a clue about what they have missed and don't know.
 
Completely worthless. Much rather be rolling in plush leather luxury of a G-1000-equipped Cessna Skyhawk 172SP. Aww yeah! Who would want to waste their time in something obsolete like a taildragger? I bet they don't even have GPS.
 
If your primary flight instructor did his or her job correctly, it will make little difference to the student where the little wheel is located on the aircraft. By this I mean that the instructor required faultless flight control coordination, precise airspeed control, and tolerated absolutely no drift at touch down or anywhere else on the landing or takeoff roll.

While a tricycle landing gear allows you to be a sloppy pilot, your instructor may not have done the same. If this happy circumstance was the case, you don't need a tailwheel endorsement. If you suspect that your instructor was a bit lax or you don't maintain those standards yourself, get another instructor or make it a point to get comfortable in a conventional-gear aircraft.
 
Waldom said:
If your primary flight instructor did his or her job correctly, it will make little difference to the student where the little wheel is located on the aircraft. By this I mean that the instructor required faultless flight control coordination, precise airspeed control, and tolerated absolutely no drift at touch down or anywhere else on the landing or takeoff roll.

While a tricycle landing gear allows you to be a sloppy pilot, your instructor may not have done the same. If this happy circumstance was the case, you don't need a tailwheel endorsement. If you suspect that your instructor was a bit lax or you don't maintain those standards yourself, get another instructor or make it a point to get comfortable in a conventional-gear aircraft.


I don't agree at all that it won't make any difference at all just because your instructor did their job correctly. It doesn't matter how perfectly you fly a tricycle gear airplane. Becoming proficient in a tailwheel airplane will enable you to feel things that you never noticed in a tricycle gear airplane. This has nothing to do with being a sloppy pilot in a tricycle or tailwheel airplane. A tailwheel airplane forces you to make positive and immediate corrections. Learning to make these corrections and knowing when to make them will translate to any aircraft. Whether your instructor was top notch or lax, if you are interested in being a better pilot, you will benefit from a tailwheel endorsement.
 
i've flown a lot of airplanes. especially for the time i have. the sewer tube (sa227) was a pretty difficult plane to land, but the hardest was a piper tripacer with a tailwheel conversion. by far the hardest to land

did getting the tailwheel help me in my career progression at all? no, but it was fun. the only people that seem to care about tailwheel experience are the old timers, and they aren't the ones interviewing you.
 
VNugget said:
Completely worthless. Much rather be rolling in plush leather luxury of a G-1000-equipped Cessna Skyhawk 172SP. Aww yeah! Who would want to waste their time in something obsolete like a taildragger? I bet they don't even have GPS.

I can only hope you are being sarcastic.

I remember a kid who already knew everything try flying the Citabria
with me as the instructor. Wasn't interested in the ground schooling
about ground loops, and landing techniques. After his 3rd try he gave
up. As he walked away, he muttered that he didn't need to fly an old
fabric airplane since his daddy would get him a job at TWA.

I prefer an old dope and rag no radio, NO GPS, no electrical, and
biological starter.

It makes you a better pilot. Period.

CE
 
Needed? Nah.. but it sure is fun. :)
 
dardar said:
but the hardest was a piper tripacer with a tailwheel conversion.

I thought the Pacer came first, and the tripacer was a pacer with the nose wheel conversion. Am I mistaken?

The tailwheel endorsement is on my wishlist of things to get, especially since I would eventually like to own an old taildragger. To me stick and rudder flying with a tailwheel is a more pure form of flying, back to basics. Technology is nice, but sometimes the basics is a nice break. Perhaps what will influence your decision about the endorsement is the availability to fly a tailwheel plane after the endorsement. They are getting harder to find for flight training and especially rental.
 
It's really hard for me to believe that young people graduate with a college DEGREE IN AVIATION as a pilot and they can not land three-quarters of the airplanes at Oshkosh.

Any such program should include a tailwheel checkout and a 10-hour course in aerobatics.
 
hydroflyer said:
I thought the Pacer came first, and the tripacer was a pacer with the nose wheel conversion. Am I mistaken?
He's probably talking about the history of the particular airplane he flew.

CrimsonEclipse said:
I can only hope you are being sarcastic.
Only on days that end with Y. I fully share your thoughts on the matter. Take a look at my profile.
 
Last edited:
UndauntedFlyer said:
It's really hard for me to believe that young people graduate with a college DEGREE IN AVIATION as a pilot and they can not land three-quarters of the airplanes at Oshkosh.

Any such program should include a tailwheel checkout and a 10-hour course in aerobatics.
Hell, I know one where you don't have to ever set foot in an airplane.

Sometimes I wish I'd listen to Pilotyip :(
 
hydroflyer said:
I thought the Pacer came first, and the tripacer was a pacer with the nose wheel conversion. Am I mistaken?

If you mean that all tri-pacers are pacers which have been retrofitted with nosewheels, yes, you are mistaken. The tri-pacer was an actual factory model, the PA-22 (The Pacer is a PA-20) It is not uncommon for people to convert a PA-22 to a PA-20. the conversion is very simple.
 
My first twenty hours of conventional gear was a C-170. That thing will teach a person what not to do in an airplane on the ground. The next hundred or so was a piper J3 and she taught me how to fly. Then came fifty or so in the spring gear citabria. That thing lets one know what it's like to be a basketball. Then I spent the next thousand hours in a maule with some evil minded cone tail luscombe time thrown in. Stearman, oh yeah, right back to the question of, am I a pilot or a passenger. After all that, an over gross 600hp ag-cat working off a dirt road was childs play.
Does a conventional gear endorsement do anything for you. You want to be a pilot or just somebody with a ticket?
 
Only if you are going to fly a tail wheel aircraft.
UA-RESURRECTED said:
Sure it can't hurt, but these days you could easily start from zero time to 777 captain without ever touching a tailwheeled airplane. So, is it really worth getting? Do you really need it if you're a career-minded pilot?


 
I agree, They will bite you !
mcjohn said:
No matter how awesome a pilot thinks their skills are if they try to land a heavy tail dragger in a crosswind or even on a calm day he/she will undoubtedly be humbled. It is a totally different kind of flying that takes practice. People say once you have it it's easy. If you learn on one it should be easy. But if you have a few hundred hours in a C172 and give it a go you're ego will be crushed. Go try it in a 170 or 185 or something. You'll see.
 
Whopping 220 hours TT and giving advice like this ! Wow !
VNugget said:
Completely worthless. Much rather be rolling in plush leather luxury of a G-1000-equipped Cessna Skyhawk 172SP. Aww yeah! Who would want to waste their time in something obsolete like a taildragger? I bet they don't even have GPS.
 
UA-RESURRECTED said:
is it really worth getting? Do you really need it if you're a career-minded pilot?
I see you fly a PA28-140. By now you have discovered that when you land a little off-center, you don't crash. The landing may not be purr-fect, but it's not so bad, and sometimes it's pretty as you please.
I don't know where you are in your training, but somewhere along the line, you have probably had these thoughts - maybe even encouraged by your instructor.

So you probably think it's ok to land a litle off-center. By off-center, I mean 2 things: (1) being off-center from the runway centerline, and (2) not having the nose precisely aligned with the airplane's forward motion.
(1)&(2) are seperate, but inseperately related.

In (2) if the nose is precisely aligned with the airplane's forward motion on initial touch-down, and remains that way, throughout the landing roll until slowed to a safe taxi speed, there will be no side-load, or side ways force.

In a nosewheel airplane, since it is designed with the CG forward of the landing gear, if the nose is off-center at touch-down, the CG being foward of the landing gear will pull the nose back into alignment with the runway. You are probably not even aware that the nose was a little off, just a degree or two, not in alignment with it's forward motion. The forward-pulling CG took care of that so you wouldn't even notice. Isn't that great to have such good engineering?

Good engineering, but bad for training. It's kinda like having training wheels on permanantly.

So, you say, in effect, if all the airplanes you're ever gonna fly are the kind with "training wheels" why bother?

Well,...sometimes, very rarely, but sometimes, the training wheels on these airplanes come off. By that, I mean, a very unusual "squirrely", gusty,crosswind/tailwind/windshear situation on touchdown may cause this well-engineered machine to not respond in the normal manner.

In a tailwheel airplane, the cg is behind the main landing gear, so if your nose is not aligned on touchdown, the sideways force is multiplied. The cg pulls the tail around more. Instant rudder pressure action is required in exactly the right moment and exactly right amont of pressure. It's really no big deal. You do it when you walk. You put one foot precisely in front of the other, with precisely the right amount of pressure as you walk along in a purposeful manner. You're not thinking about it, but you're doing it. Because you practiced it. You fell down a bunch of times practicing it, but you got it, and by now you don't even think about it.

Same thing with landing an airplane. Any airplane.
 
There are pilots and there are drivers. Pilots have tailwheel experience/signoff. I sure wish tailwheel experience was part of the commercial requirements. Just spent may last tour constantly saying 'how 'bout that cross-wind correction??!!' :rolleyes:

BTW, the conversion to turn the Tri-Pacer (PA-22-xxx where the xxx=horsepower) into a real airplane is called the PA-22/20-xxx. Neat conversion, especially with a 180 shoehorned into the cowl.
 
sleddriver71 said:
I don't agree at all that it won't make any difference at all just because your instructor did their job correctly. It doesn't matter how perfectly you fly a tricycle gear airplane. Becoming proficient in a tailwheel airplane will enable you to feel things that you never noticed in a tricycle gear airplane. This has nothing to do with being a sloppy pilot in a tricycle or tailwheel airplane. A tailwheel airplane forces you to make positive and immediate corrections. Learning to make these corrections and knowing when to make them will translate to any aircraft. Whether your instructor was top notch or lax, if you are interested in being a better pilot, you will benefit from a tailwheel endorsement.

Sleddriver, I agree with your remarks regarding conventional-gear aircraft and how the experience translates to all aircraft. I've spent more than 6000 hours in them. I also concur that the majority of pilots out there would greatly benefit by gaining tailwheel experience.

I have transitioned a very few folks to tailwheel aircraft that had little trouble adjusting to the configuration. They were each disiplined, self-motivated airmen that payed attention to details.

My point is that some instructor taught that disipline and attention to detail. I acknowledge that most folks that made the transition did not meet that description. They frankly did not realize how poor their performance actually was until they flew a tailwheel aircraft. I feel that their primary instructor shared some of the blame for this.

In my previous post, I guess I was a bit too subtle. I was trying to avoid the "you ain't worth much unless you've flown a taildragger" attitude.
 
Last edited:
A Squared said:
If you mean that all tri-pacers are pacers which have been retrofitted with nosewheels, yes, you are mistaken. The tri-pacer was an actual factory model, the PA-22 (The Pacer is a PA-20) It is not uncommon for people to convert a PA-22 to a PA-20. the conversion is very simple.

Thanks for clearing that up.
 
tracearabians said:
Whopping 220 hours TT and giving advice like this ! Wow !

Did you actually look at some of the planes in his profile?
 
RightPedal said:
My first twenty hours of conventional gear was a C-170. That thing will teach a person what not to do in an airplane on the ground. The next hundred or so was a piper J3 and she taught me how to fly. Then came fifty or so in the spring gear citabria. That thing lets one know what it's like to be a basketball. Then I spent the next thousand hours in a maule with some evil minded cone tail luscombe time thrown in. Stearman, oh yeah, right back to the question of, am I a pilot or a passenger. After all that, an over gross 600hp ag-cat working off a dirt road was childs play.
Does a conventional gear endorsement do anything for you. You want to be a pilot or just somebody with a ticket?

Respect +1

I still think you duster guys have one of the hardest (but most interesting)
jobs.

Sacrasm noted VNugget. You gave me a scare for a bit.
It's so hard to get the tone sometimes.

CE
 
You sure can tell the tailwheel pilots from the non- tailwheel pilots. All the tailwheel guys know what Iam talking about. Yes! There are two pedals on the floor and they do have a purpose.

I have done many a tailwheel endorsement for all kinds of professional pilots, from airline captains to charter pilots. Almost all have come back and said that the check airman, fellow pilots, or just they themself notice a massive increase in A/C controll and coordination both on the ground and in the air.

Go figure!
 

Latest resources

Back
Top Bottom