denverpilot
Tied Down
Any stats on accidents with overhead breaks as the initiating factor?
Do you have stats for unprovoked structural failures?
Do you have stats for unprovoked structural failures?
Ron Wattanja has performed extensive analysis on the GA accident record. However, the hot spot for Lanceairs and Glassair "fast glass" aircraft was reported to me (and a roomful of other people) by the President of the EAA, so I suspect its correct. Whether a linear arrangement exists between stall speed and accident rate is an open question.
Cessna 210. My 1998-2007 database shows 381 total accidents, 71 with fatalities.As to the cruise speed vs. fatality graph - what's the high wing production bird with the 220-ish mph cruise and 20% fatality rate?
Relatively rare, even for homebuilts. Looking at my database, out of ~2000 accidents, 43 are listed in the are listed "Mechanical Failure- Airframe" category. In almost half the cases, the cause is traceable to the pilot exceeding the limits of the airframe, bad workmanship, faulty maintenance, etc. In addition, only about 55% of the instances resulted in fatalities (some of the failures were in landing gear, some airplanes were still controlable, etc).Do you have stats for unprovoked structural failures?
Relatively rare, even for homebuilts. Looking at my database, out of ~2000 accidents, 43 are listed in the are listed "Mechanical Failure- Airframe" category. In almost half the cases, the cause is traceable to the pilot exceeding the limits of the airframe, bad workmanship, faulty maintenance, etc. In addition, only about 55% of the instances resulted in fatalities (some of the failures were in landing gear, some airplanes were still controlable, etc).
Ron Wanttaja
Cessna 210. My 1998-2007 database shows 381 total accidents, 71 with fatalities.
Ron Wanttaja
Not according to my analysis. Certainly there's a higher rate of mechanical problems in the first 50 hours, but that's coupled with pilots who (by definition) don't have much time in type.I respect Ron's experience in the field. But as R Franklin posted, mechanical problems in the first 50 hours account for more problems than pilot error.
My database actually pre-dates the spate of wing failures on the 601XL, so most of them don't show up. However, some of the failures were on SLSAs (not Experimental Amateur-Built, and thus not included in my analysis), some were on foreign aircraft overseas (ditto), and in some, the NTSB ruled it pilot error.I bet the Zenith 601XL is the largest object of that catagory too.
I'm not going to read all five pages.
You should have........