bbchien said:
It's not the Cirrus. It's the marketing to the newbie that is the inherent achilles heel for this aircraft.
Hey, let's move up to a minijet!
It's not that either, Bruce. Just about anybody who has been properly trained can properly fly almost anything. It may take some time, but I really believe that. The marketers could market Jets to new pilots, and still not hold responsibility. Even a new pilot, who only flies a jet on VFR days, in calm winds, to long wide runways, on the same exact flight (which he doesn't really need to take) often, is probably very unlikely to have a crash.
Unfortunately that's not the mission and attitude of the dangerous pilots. The danger is in the attitude of the pilots who buy these aircraft. It's the fact these pilots want to, and need to get places, and they want to do it in their shiny new airplane. They have no fear of the consequences, just like stupid teen drivers. And the risks of flying are insidious, with the exception of low level akro most things in flying don't feel risky, even though they may be very dangerous, until you crash.
Some pilots of these aircraft, feel that their single engine Cirrus is a replacement for the airlines, and while that may be true on some days, it isn't every day of the year, and it isn't on every single trip. They sit looking at their shiny white plane in the hangar, and say, "I bought you do make my life easier, and I'm going to fly you, damn what the crusty old instructor says."
So you have a combination of inability to properly judge the risks of the trip, combined with a need to have a rosy picture of the risks, because a lot depends on making the trip.
This is not to say that I don't think that judgement gets better with time. Bruce, has described flights I cannot imagine taking, and many with his family onboard, but he made the decision to take those flights with the benefit of his 10,000 hours in airplanes, and the full knowledge of the dangers posed by that weather, and with a known-ice twin.
The problem is that many of the pilots that crash their Cirrui have neither the experience nor the knowledge nor the equipment to safely navigate the weather they fly. And that could happen in any aircraft, from a 150 all the way to a 737.