- Joined
- Feb 17, 2010
- Messages
- 2,051
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Display name:
Jim
I know a lot of student pilots solo, but never get their ticket.
I know a lot of private pilots get their ticket, then hardly ever fly again.
I know a lot of private pilots fly quite a bit for a short while after getting their ticket, then taper off to little or nothing.
I know a lot of pilots go on to have aviation careers and fly regularly and frequently.
I'd be curious to know what the distribution of total hours flown is across the pilot population. (I'd be further curious to see it broken down by pilot age, by how long a pilot's held a certificate, by highest rating, and all sorts of other criteria as well.)
Do such data exist, and are they publicly available for review?
I know a lot of private pilots get their ticket, then hardly ever fly again.
I know a lot of private pilots fly quite a bit for a short while after getting their ticket, then taper off to little or nothing.
I know a lot of pilots go on to have aviation careers and fly regularly and frequently.
I'd be curious to know what the distribution of total hours flown is across the pilot population. (I'd be further curious to see it broken down by pilot age, by how long a pilot's held a certificate, by highest rating, and all sorts of other criteria as well.)
Do such data exist, and are they publicly available for review?