
If however you find yourself in a behind the power curve or downwind dragon situation, the throttle is wide open, turbos are engaged and you are instinctively going to try to fight your way out, right up to the point of possible impact. There is probably no way in these situations that you are going to willingly close the throttle before impact.
This scenario is one that I believe is so absolutely typical of the type of "mushing into the ground" after take-off accidents that we are seeing too regularly at the moment. I've said it before and I'll say it again:
Current gyro training & instruction in South Africa is NOT adequately teaching students to recognise when they're flying behind the power curve - or how to properly fly out of it. Too much theory and "head in the cockpit fly-by-numbers" instruction and not enough practical fly-by-the-seat of your pants demonstration of it; "can you feel it now, we're getting behind the power curve...yes it feels like a downdraft but we're really losing lift and thus altitude because we're behind the drag curve... so here's what you need to do..." instruction.



Recognising and averting the behind-the-power-curve pitfalls which are the root cause of too many gyro accidents and the post-impact / roll-over fires is going to require a training solution rather than just a technical construction solution.
