And the instructor is great - he tells me I'm making the right progress at the right speed and still on track to get to test standard in 45 hours.
Along with a longer answer...I would listen to your instructor. I've been flying for 25 years and my landings aren't consistent. Of course my parameters for what
I think is a good landing will be different to yours. I doubt anyone's landings are consistent, even your instructors.. If it looks tidy and you haven't broken the wheels off, if it doesn't lurch away to one side when touching down in a crosswind and you can land within 50 metres or so of where you want to be, if you can do all of this 50% of the time as a student pilot then I think you are doing well.