I'm not eliminating any data to prove some sort of agenda. I chose an objective, specific data set. Your two crashes don't fit in to the criteria I use for my database. The first one is a public aircraft. I include only Part 135 operators. The second was not a fatal crash. If we include public aircraft and non-fatal crashes, then there are probably going to be the same ratio of VFR only crashes that I see in fatal crashes.
I don't know why you are so passionately arguing for VFR singles. You just don't get it. It doesn't matter whether the flight starts out as IFR of VFR, having the training and capability to fly SPIFR is what makes the difference. Having the ability to go IFR instead of scud running in MVFR is what saves lives. I don't need a published study from someone with an agenda. I have a database of all fatal HAA crashes since 2000 and the data is right there. The NTSB is my published study. Beyond that, I have done both. I have flown VFR HAA singles in MVFR in the mountains, at night, in legal weather. I have also flown HAA SPIFR twins. I have first hand experience, I know what is safer. Here I'll break it down for you since you don't want to do the work:
- 37 Fatal civil HAA crashes since 2000 with factual reports available
- 11 VFR to IMC
- 8 CFIT, all at night, without goggles
- 3 Mechanical
- 2 Midair
- 2 Collission with obstacles low level
- 2 LTE
- 2 Pilot error (hydraulic test procedure & inadvertantly disabled FADECs)
- 2 Low level aggressive maneuvering
- 2 Loss of control on landing / SWP
- 1 In flight breakup
- 1 Fuel exhaustion
- 1 Bird Strike
Again, only two of the VFR to IMC or CFIT crashes were in IFR certified aircraft, yet neither pilot was SPIFR current and qualified. The
only fatal HAA accident since 2000 in an IFR aircraft with a current and qualified SPIFR pilot was the Duke Life Flight crash caused by mechanical/pilot error in dealing with the emergency.
You can keep making up whatever you want, there are the facts.