wanttaja
En-Route
Lies, Dam* Lies and Statistics. Mark Twain.
Correlation does not verify Causation. Me (Engineer, not a Mathematician)
“Statistics are like bikinis. What they reveal is interesting. What they conceal is vital!” (Professor Aaron Levenstein)
“The purpose of analysis is insight, not bull****” (T.C. Weston, The Boeing Company, 1974. My boss, in fact....it was on a sampler on his office wall).
In my homebuilt accident analysis, I see a regular subset of "non-traditional" midairs...airplanes swapping paint while flying formation, airplanes colliding on the runway, etc....but it sounds like ADS-B aircraft weren't involved in any of these, either. There were also cases where ADS-B may not have been much advantage; sudden turns into collisions, etc. It's possible they were not included in the methodology, but, again, that leads to questions about how they chose the cases to include.
For my aircraft, the cheapest approach I've found will cost about a quarter of the value of the airplane. For something that's very difficult for me to take advantage of (no spare space for a display, open cockpit in direct sunlight, no intercom to tie audible alerts to).My ADSB-OUT install was only $1400 with the rebate (skybeacon) and ADSB-IN I had the year before for $130 with a Stratux. That is a lot less than $3k-$7k. Even before the ADSB-OUT mandate, the Stratux gave great weather, traffic, and GPS navigation.
I was told that ADS-B is necessary because of GPS. In the old days, people would navigate from Town A to Town B, at some altitude within the range of the hemispheric rule with (maybe) an effort to keep it within the 100 ft Private flight exam limits. With autopilot-coupled GPS, pilots fly between precise geographic coordinates at precise integer altitudes.One thing that may be overlooked is that ADSB IN devices are providing the impetus for many VFR planes and pilots to get GPS navigation. While not necessary, Having a “fool proof” navigation source certainly results in fewer people getting lost, overflying their airport and getting low on fuel, or otherwise task saturated.
There are obviously cases where this doesn't apply, such as collisions in the pattern.
Finally, it's difficult to quantitize the accidents where ADS-B is an actual contributor. Friend of mine (a CFI) went flying with another friend who had a brand new ADS-B in system installed in his Cessna. My CFI buddy had to keep pushing the yoke forward because the pilot would ignore the airplane while fiddling with the electronics.
Ron Wanttaja