wanttaja
En-Route
I'm trying to compute the average number of GA hours flown in the US for personal/recreational flying.
In 2020, the annual FAA GA Survey said that fixed-wing piston aircraft flew an average of 95 hours. But only 45% of the fixed-wing piston hours flown by GA are for personal/recreational use. An estimate of the annual flight hours flown for personal or recreational use would give a better comparison to Experimental Amateur-Built aircraft.
So: How to compute an average annual hours for GA aircraft operated for personal use?
Most classic aircraft are probably NOT flown for non-recreational use. Cessna 120s, 140s, and 170s, Bellancas (both the four-seaters and the Citabria-heritage), Aeroncas, J-3s, etc. How can we estimate how many hours per year these planes are flying?
One way occurred to me: Many aircraft suffer multiple accidents over their lives. For instance from 1998 to 2020, I found over 500 aircraft that suffered two (or more!) accidents. If the NTSB recorded the total time for the aircraft at the time of the accident (as they usually do), one could compute the average annual flight time for the period between the accidents.
I ran the analysis, and came up with what looks like reasonable results. Except for the outlyers.
Here's a summary of my data.
The middle column shows the median annual flight hours, the "Max" column indicates the maximum value within that aircraft type.
I'm just basically curious on what folks think is a "believable" maximum annual utilization rate for an owner-flown aircraft. I've looked at the NTSB reports for some of these, and it's obviously the same airplane. The later report for the high-scoring J-3 even referenced the previous report.
Ron Wanttaja
In 2020, the annual FAA GA Survey said that fixed-wing piston aircraft flew an average of 95 hours. But only 45% of the fixed-wing piston hours flown by GA are for personal/recreational use. An estimate of the annual flight hours flown for personal or recreational use would give a better comparison to Experimental Amateur-Built aircraft.
So: How to compute an average annual hours for GA aircraft operated for personal use?
Most classic aircraft are probably NOT flown for non-recreational use. Cessna 120s, 140s, and 170s, Bellancas (both the four-seaters and the Citabria-heritage), Aeroncas, J-3s, etc. How can we estimate how many hours per year these planes are flying?
One way occurred to me: Many aircraft suffer multiple accidents over their lives. For instance from 1998 to 2020, I found over 500 aircraft that suffered two (or more!) accidents. If the NTSB recorded the total time for the aircraft at the time of the accident (as they usually do), one could compute the average annual flight time for the period between the accidents.
I ran the analysis, and came up with what looks like reasonable results. Except for the outlyers.
Here's a summary of my data.
The middle column shows the median annual flight hours, the "Max" column indicates the maximum value within that aircraft type.
I'm just basically curious on what folks think is a "believable" maximum annual utilization rate for an owner-flown aircraft. I've looked at the NTSB reports for some of these, and it's obviously the same airplane. The later report for the high-scoring J-3 even referenced the previous report.
Ron Wanttaja