LJS1993
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2012
- Messages
- 584
- Location
- Riverside, California
- Display Name
Display name:
LJ Savala
You know gents it's looking like if you have the cash Diamond is the way to go.
No, it's not, being burned to death in an otherwise survivable accident in this day and age is an engineering and design failure. It's why I won't fly the early Pawnees unless they've been retrofitted with the D model wings and use those fuel tanks rather than the nose.
You know gents it's looking like if you have the cash Diamond is the way to go.
You know gents it's looking like if you have the cash Diamond is the way to go.
For what?
Once in a spin the SR20 and SR22 are virtually impossible to recover. Thankful for my big rudder, center stick, mushy controls when slow, docile stall characteristics and 260 HP.
RIP.
Getting somewhere slowly.
Maybe that's why I don't get any calls about them.
I don't keep a record, but typically get a phone call or two on most days about some type of aviation-related project involving acquisition, consulting, appraisal, financial, taxation, budgeting, deal structure, expert witness and the other stuff we do that surrounds these issues. Most of the calls involve some kind of airplane that's either owned or desired.
I don't know how long Diamond has been making airplanes but can't remember a single question about them--ever. But then I don't get many about Bellanca's either.
For what?
Well let's see. Newer technology, solid service record, has moderate cool factor, why not?
So in your wisdom that's the way to go, right? Does the market support your theory? Would a majority of pilots say that wierd-looking is a better definition than cool?
Well let me see here. The market doesn't support my theory for sure. However let's take the car industry for one second. Volvo is renowned for their excellent safety and durability yet does the market necessarily reflect that? As for pilots, it's all personal choice in terms of cool factor. Some guys think old 1950's Cessna's are the definition of cool while others think Lancair is the ultimate in cool. So cool factor is purely relative I guess.
So in your wisdom that's the way to go, right? Does the market support your theory? Would a majority of pilots say that wierd-looking is a better definition than cool?
Weirder looking is cool in this case if you are looking for efficiency. Traditional tapered fuselages create more drag.
Yeah, Flightaware tracks show that it's a real burner.
No further questions. Pass the witness.
Well I think they look pretty "cool" but who knows? I think the 337 and the OV-10 are very cool. I'm just a weird guy when it comes to the planes I think look cool I guess.
Does better than most 180hp planes, but yeah, not fast mostly due to the glider wings. I was getting around 130kts on 6.5 gph on the one I used to fly. The DA-20 is actually the most impressive for speed efficiency, you get 125 on 4.5.
Paul, it's not fire that is the primary concern. When you analyze that data with more scrutiny than just "had a fire" is where you start seeing the problems. The Meridian I would expect to have more fires in crashes because it is the highest energy aircraft (heaviest, and carrying the most fuel along with having a turbine which has more very hot bits and open flame potential for ignition). The thing is those crashes would not have been survivable regardless the fire. My issue with the Cirri is that there have been several accidents now of sufficiently low energy where the occupants survived the impact and were immolated in the ensuing fire, this last accident being such a case. I don't mind being auto cremated after I'm dead, I'm not so fond of the idea of being cremated while still alive.
I'll certainly buy that greater energy means less survivability. An interesting plot is landing kinetic energy vs. the percentage of accidents that are fatal. Gee, fatality percentage goes up with landing kinetic energy. A straight line is a pretty good fit.
However, you ignored the fact that even the venerable 172 has survivable accidents where people die from burns.
Here is a bit of a morbid thought. Increase fuselage strength, add four point belts and airbags, and make the interior more crash friendly like modern cars. Assume chance of fire stays the same i.e. rest of design is unchanged. You have upped the chance of surviving the crash. Have you now moved survivability more into the area where impact is violent enough to cause a fire?
I'm quietly waiting for the Cirri three to report to this string.....
....no tanks you very much.....
And we are waiting for that guy who started this whole Cirrus fire concept by misreading data to include brake fires to step up and correct everyone.
Now who was that...... It will come to me.....
Did this look like a brake fire? Did a man, and quite possibly a woman, not survive a crash to die of fire?
Did this look like a brake fire? Did a man, and quite possibly a woman, not survive a crash to die of fire?
Google:What do "frangible" mean?
What do "frangible" mean?
The issue is the "flaming death trap" hysteria regarding Cirrus. Yes, this was a horrible accident. The question is whether it is more likely in a Cirrus than other aircraft. Before I present data some caveats. Only factual reports include the term "thermal injuries" that says death was caused by fire. In the case of Cirrus I know of two cases this will miss. However, that is true for all makes. Secondly, I have made no attempt to normalize for flight hours. Because of that I would expect Cessna to be high due to lots of flight hours. The point of the data is to show that the data does not support the idea that Cirrus is somehow a lot worse than other aircraft. You can burn to death in a Cirrus but the same is true of a Cessna or a Beech.
Searching only fatal accidents from 1/1/2000 to 1/1/2013 for the term "thermal injuries" returns the following number of hits:
Beech 13
Cessna 20
Cirrus 0
Diamond 1
Mooney 2
Piper 18
Note that I did not select for particular models so the Beech and Cessna nets were cast very wide.
As examples of a narrower search, for the same time frame:
C206 4
C172 4
C182 0
Beech 35 1
Beech 36 4
Piper 28 5
None of this changes the horrible nature of this accident. Hopefully it puts into perspective.
I know people hate data. It challenges their position and makes for less fun arguing. Here is an interesting graph. Disclaimer: Graph is from Why Cirrus website but it is based on data rather than speculation. It was done by doing a search of NTSB data on "post crash fire". I did a similar search but used "thermal injuries" to look for people who died of burns. Because that only shows up in the factual report (not preliminary) it misses more recent accidents but it was still interesting including a bad period for the 206.
Shatters into small pieces.
that is really interesting. The piper malibu O2 generator always gave me the willies but I finally decided it was paranoi on my part. I wonder if that is a contributer after all.
So in your wisdom that's the way to go, right? Does the market support your theory? Would a majority of pilots say that wierd-looking is a better definition than cool?
Yeah, Flightaware tracks show that it's a real burner.
What do the FlightAware tracks say for other fixed-gear certified 180hp piston singles?
There has been at least one death by post impact fire in a Diamond so I disagree that preventing them is a simple engineering issue. The odds can be reduced but not taken to zero.
The correct statistic is "%of the fleet that had an otherwise surviveable death due to post crash fire"Sailer said:And we are waiting for that guy who started this whole Cirrus fire concept by misreading data to include brake fires to step up and correct everyone