This guy tried to fly a real ILS (night, wx) and died because he couldn't fly without an autopilot. Just like the guy from Rockcliffe who tried to fly the ILS 7 at Ottawa one night, I think it was in a C177?
And you might say, well, maybe private pilots should stick to fair weather flying. And you'd be right. But let's look at this one:
That guy died trying to land a Bonanza on a sunny day on a long, wide paved runway without much wind:
For decades, people have been telling me that my fixation with the fundamentals -i watched this accident from the front of my hangar and agree 100%. we did not see the bounce but saw the nose pitch up and heard the power applied and watched it stall spin and go straight into the ground under what sounded like full power. it had time for almost 1/2 turn in the spin and that thing bounced off the ground and ended up facing the runway very near the 1000' markers. i tried to think of everything to take the blame off this pilot but you are absolutely correct in your assessment.
stick and rudder flying, systems knowledge - is stupid, and I accept that.
But why are people still dying, year after year?
I'm really old-fashioned. Almost everyone I flew with is dead now, but I'm not,
and it's not because of my charming personality which airframes appreciate.
Free advice: always be at least one "what if" question away from death.
What if the autopilot fails? Well, I can fly an ILS better than it can. Needles
in the donut until the tires hit the pavement.