Thanks
@wanttaja from a statistical standpoint I agree with you, but there is a TON of evidence that this plane is marketed as a low flying, highly maneuverable, do anything starter toy with only 20 hrs required to fly it.. I know in reality many of the pilots have a lot of time, but the point is that they're advocating inherently risky flying tactics and not backing it up with the required training or disciplinary backbone. When almost half of the accidents so far has by their own employees (or people affiliated) flying into box canyons or having low altitude crashes this shows that the culture as a whole is flawed. The Cirrus and Vans crashes were different since they had different trends and causes. This is kind of like saying "we don't know that space walks without a space suit is dangerous since we don't have enough statistical evidence to prove that walking in space without a suit will kill you.. we need a bigger
N"
They grounded all the Max jets after just *2* accidents despite *hundreds* of examples of flying and Boeing has been absolutely raked over the coals over the trim feature. I think 5 accidents out of 100 examples, all following a nearly identical trend (low altitude antics) should be a very strong indicator that something is wrong. I am *NOT* saying the plane should be grounded, but I do think the top brass at Icon needs to overhaul their training program (a la what Cirrus did) and get ahead of the bus here.
So far they've not only been silent, but continue to advocate, what is, honestly, poor flying, poor ADM, and poor judgement among what should be a professional sport
They're (Icon) basically telling you to fly this plane in direct violation FAR 91.13