Tim,
3. If you truly want to see what a competent flyer sees, pick someone and get permission to stand directly behind them while flying squares.
4. Take off your engineering hat before we blow it off for you. I know you think you are bringing up good material. You are wrong; a great many of us have been though this numerous times.
5. Replace hat with something more suited to an artistic approach. In my view, flying the pattern is more art than science.
6. At the very least, recognize that the printed word is woefully inadequate when discussing this topic.
Dan
Tim,
Having been down the same,, exact same,, thought process, item two in Dans post is the most relevant,,( for the record dont satnd behind me LOL)
a Lesson learned long ago from an archery instructor,, " once you can put all five arrows in the same place,, then we can move that place wherever we need to"
In other words,, focus on making things repeatable,, make the squares the same size,, same shape, consistantly,, time after time,, THEN you can tweak the size and shape as needed.
Your comment about not learning mistakes is valid,, however, I think repeatability is the first step, get things the same size and shape, time after time, then make adjustments to make them right....
but before that, you really need to get a well trimmed airframe, until your airframe AND POWER system are refined, most of the rest is white noise,, it matters,, My Gee Bee profile was probably the single biggest tool for growth I had. It flew well, the LA46 was repeatable flight after flight,, and I was able to focus on making my maneuvers consistent,,
That said, I too still have LOTS of room for improvement,,