David Megginson
Pattern Altitude
That's a story, not a stat.One you crash and one you don’t. Listen to that atc tape I posted.
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That's a story, not a stat.One you crash and one you don’t. Listen to that atc tape I posted.
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That's because non-accidents don't get reported, for singles or twins; it's just the number of fatal accidents for hours flown.
I don't know if that's improved in recent years for twins, but if you want to consider individual reports of successful landings in twins after an engine failure (the majority, I'd hope), you also have to consider that a twin is roughly 2× as likely to have an engine failure as a single is, so they'll have a lot more need to handle them.
I completely understand that there are lots of good reasons for having a twin. I just haven't personally seen the evidence yet (stats, not personal stories) that safety is one of them.
That's quite possibly true, but at this point, we can't prove it to be true.It’s apples and oranges. Twins fly tougher missions. People are more likely to fly twins further, cross country, across water or in low IMC. The twin makes flying low IFR a reasonable thing to do. You can’t mitigate the risk of engine failure in low IMC without equipment. (Second engine or chute). You can mitigate the risks of engine failure in a twin with training. Which has nothing do with IMC. Properly trained, twins have more redundancy than a single. The stats are skewed by those that as GA pilots failed to maintain the required proficiency.
So VERY specifically, to fly low IMC personally I need a twin. Won’t do it in a single. And thus the diminished need for WAAS, which is the original topic...
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In my opinion this gets unfairly talked about in the aviation circles and regurgitated as truth. As a member on the Twin Cessna Owners forum I can tell you of several instances where owners have recently been forced to cage one and landed safely. This never gets reported. If these are never reported then how could any statistics on this topic be relevant/accurate? Don’t get me wrong, training and proficiency are of utmost importance and the second engine is far from a guarantee...just don’t think there are accurate stats on this subject. If my memory is correct, I think @Lance F caged one not too long ago and he’s still with us.
So which is safer? It's complicated. Twins fly tougher flights, but also have more-experienced and more-current pilots. The actual stats (vs anecdotes and hypotheses) so far suggest the singles are marginally safer, but as you suggest, there's room for refinement.
And it gets even trickier if we bring chutes into the discussion.
I suspect, either way, you'd plan to land at the nearest usable airport. With the caged engine, you'd have the option to pick one a few minutes further away with better maintenance facilities.Often in a twin, you cage an engine as a preventive measure where in a single you let the engine run itself to death. For example, I had an oil alert in an Aerostar, I shut down the engine and flew it with a caged engine. In a single, I would just have assumed the engine was going to eat itself and not shut it down. (The actual issue was a wire to the oil pressure sensor shorted out).
Tim
All stats do. The ones we have imperfect, but unsupported hypotheses or individual anecdotes are even less reliable.What stats? I have yet to see any stats which do not rely upon huge assumptions.
Tim
All stats do. The ones we have imperfect, but unsupported hypotheses or individual anecdotes are even less reliable.
It would be good to get more, but as it stands, the evidence suggests twins aren't safer, and might even be slightly riskier. Better stats might turn that conclusion on its head, but wishful thinking won't
We usually advise our pilot/owners, that unless you are going to be frequently flying in actual, and flying at or near approach minimums, don't waste the money on WAAS if you have a perfectly good IFR capable GPS already. Truth is, the majority of GA pilot/owners simply don't do it often enough to justify the expense, or to be comfortable and proficient enough to fly in hard IMC safely.
There's value in WAAS even if you don't fly below LNAV/VNAV minimums:
1) When you do fly an approach - Vertical guidance. Very nice to have, especially if your autopilot can couple to it.
2) Ability to use nearly any airport as an alternate. Without WAAS, your alternate needs to have non-GPS approaches available. That means you may need to select an alternate that's farther away, which means you need to carry more fuel to be legal, which means less payload.
3) If you don't have ADS-B yet, you'll need a WAAS position source. While there are plenty of ADS-B transponders that have their own WAAS source built in for exactly that purpose, that option usually costs about an extra $1K plus installation, so you might as well get something for it instead.
Plus, when the poop hits the prop, you want to be able to get down safely. Having approaches with vertical guidance available at almost every little podunk airport there is makes me feel MUCH better about my prospects when flying single-engine IMC...
I upgraded my 430 to WaaS for technical reasons. The GNS WAAS versions are getting long term Garmin support, Wanted ADS-B position source and ADS-B Traffic & weather on the panel in addition to the iPad.
Can't imagine flying down to 200' minimums in a single engine airplane, though many do. Just not me. IF engine trouble happens you have to hope when you pop out of the soup you don't hit a barn, house, power lines, etc..
Both of these are reason enough for WAAS, even if a pilot has no intention of flying to 200' minimums.
Sure. But the way now to get waas isn’t to upgrade that box it’s to get a new one...
Net new install you're generally right. The OP was buying a plane with a GNS-530 already installed. Getting it updated by Garmin and installing a new WAAS antenna and maybe a new COAX cable is his lowest cost WAAS option.
It was Richard Collins in 1965, originally. I don't think the stats have changed much, except that piston twins are much less popular than they were half a century ago.What stats? Every stats I have seen just show that we have NO stats about which is safer. Which was the basis of the article; according to legend started by J. McClellan if memory serves; what started questing the whole premise that twins are safer.
Tim
It was Richard Collins in 1965, originally. I don't think the stats have changed much, except that piston twins are much less popular than they were half a century ago.
http://airfactsjournal.com/2011/12/50-years-ago-in-air-facts-double-trouble/
Follow-up:
https://airfactsjournal.com/2017/03/whats-wrong-piston-twin-pilots/
The stats are that twins are (or were) more dangerous than singles over all. At the start of the discussion, I suggested there weren't any stats specifically comparing IFR in twins and singles, so it was dangerous just to assume a priori that twins would be safer. Then I pointed out that people had made the same assumption about twins over singles in general, and it hadn't held up. I think we've closed the circle now. There's no evidence that twins are safer in IFR, just speculation.Those stats aren’t anything to do with flying low IMC, which was my premise. Greatly added utility. And the danger in twins is lack of proficiency, not random chance, something you can deal with if you choose.
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The stats are that twins are (or were) more dangerous than singles over all. At the start of the discussion, I suggested there weren't any stats specifically comparing IFR in twins and singles, so it was dangerous just to assume a priori that twins would be safer. Then I pointed out that people had made the same assumption about twins over singles in general, and it hadn't held up. I think we've closed the circle now. There's no evidence that twins are safer in IFR, just speculation.
The stats are that twins are (or were) more dangerous than singles over all. At the start of the discussion, I suggested there weren't any stats specifically comparing IFR in twins and singles, so it was dangerous just to assume a priori that twins would be safer. Then I pointed out that people had made the same assumption about twins over singles in general, and it hadn't held up. I think we've closed the circle now. There's no evidence that twins are safer in IFR, just speculation.
I'd agree with that. Each step up becomes less forgiving of weekend fliers. Most of the time, a fixed-gear 160/180HP entry-level plane requires you to do something stupid to get hurt. A complex single is slippery, faster, and demands a higher degree of proficiency to hand-fly in IMC, especially after a vacuum failure. A non-inline piston twin demands frequent recurrent sim training (maybe every 6–12 months) to have a hope of staying alive in an asymmetric-thrust event close to the ground.This effect is due to the general lack of proficiency of GA pilots.
Yes, I was a passenger in a Bearskin Airlines Pilatus PC-12 on a scheduled run between YOW and YKZ in 2002.Ever seen a single engined airliner
Back to the original point, I still haven't seen evidence (vs hypothesis) that piston singles have a higher fatal accident rate in IMC than piston twins. Speculation is fine—we all have to act on our hunches sometimes—but it's not evidence others can use.The point was that flying low IMC in a single is poor risk management - you’re rolling dice with no hope of mitigating that risk.
Yes, I've been a passenger in a Bearskin Airlines flight between[/QUOTE]I'd agree with that. Each step up becomes less forgiving of weekend fliers. Most of the time, a fixed-gear 160/180HP entry-level plane requires you to do something stupid to get hurt. A complex single is slippery, faster, and demands a higher degree of proficiency to hand-fly in IMC, especially after a vacuum failure. A non-inline piston twin demands frequent recurrent sim training (maybe every 6–12 months) to have a hope of staying alive in an asymmetric-thrust event close to the ground.
I'll speculate that they're all equally safe if the pilot has the experience and recency that each type of plane demands. But when the 50 hours/year fixed-gear IFR pilot (like me) doesn't uptime to 100 hours/year after moving to a complex-single, or the 100 hour/year complex-single pilot doesn't uptime to 150 hours/year and start visiting FlightSafety (or similar) regularly, bad things happen.
Yes, I was a passenger in a Bearskin Airlines Pilatus PC-12 on a scheduled run between YOW and YKZ in 2002.
The point was that flying low IMC in a single is poor risk management - you’re rolling dice with no hope of mitigating that risk. All you can do is avoid it - lowering your utility. To do otherwise is just risk taking. But a proficient pilot in a twin takes the exposure you have when flying over low IMC in a single out of the equation...
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Not sure how FAA regs map to Canadian regs, but it was a scheduled airline flight, not air taxi. Agreed that it's a very rare case, and that turbines are far more reliable than pistons.Airliner. Not 135 commuter operation. And that risk is deemed more acceptable because it is a turbine which is significantly more reliable.
The downside of the Avidyne? There are too many ways to do the same thing and it’s hard to come up with a system. Wierd but true, for me.
This is a UX antipattern and a red flag that software developers and/or product owners likely had the final call on the UI instead of professional user experience designers.
Anytime there is more than one way to do something there should be a clear and justified reason why. It’s frustrating to see UIs over complicated in this way. Garmin Pilot does this with viewing and editing a flight plan, you can view it in at least four places (including two at the same time on top of each other) and edit it in as I recall three.
Not sure how FAA regs map to Canadian regs, but it was a scheduled airline flight, not air taxi. Agreed that it's a very rare case, and that turbines are far more reliable than pistons.
I don't think Bearskin is using the PC-12 on regular scheduled flights any more, 18 years later; I just thought it was funny that I could honestly answer "yes".
And the regs are somewhat out of date—as you point out, the single turbine on the PC-12 is more reliable than the two piston engines on the DC-3s that another small Canadian airline was using until recently for scheduled service (they've had at least a couple of forced landings).
I'm surprised that forty-year-old 182s have gotten that expensive, but I haven't been following the market.I am considering the purchase of the C182. It has most of what I want, except it has a non-WAAS Garmin 530. It has a Century 2000 A/P that can couple for ILS approaches. I have my PPL, and will be starting my IR with this airplane. I understand the difference between WAAS and non-WAA. Is a WAAS capable GPS something I will really will wish I had in the next 2-4 years?
To be fair, you can tune a frequency in multiple ways using the Garmin GTN as well:I guess on the upside, I can stab a frequency in any number of ways, and I use many of them. I can use the screen touch pad, I can use the dials/knobs, I can use the keyboard, and I can use my iPad. I think it’s actually fine, just I’m the type that likes to learn one way. It just feels like I’m not using a system, but sometimes it’s easier to use the screen, other times I like using it like a KX155. And that’s just the radio tuning options. There are preselects too.
I'm surprised that forty-year-old 182s have gotten that expensive, but I haven't been following the market.
A non-WAAS 530 is weak avionics?
Sheesh, some people rely on wheelchairs for crutches. Sheesh, spend an AMU or so and get a Stratus with Foreflight and bam, you have synthetic vision. If you need.
As for the OP, in that scenario I'd probably just get the 530W upgrade. It's the cheapest option (should be around $5K installed), and gets the job done. Anything else is going to cost more. If you want something new and shiny, Avidyne IFD540 becomes the least expensive option but that's going to be $15,000.
But please please don’t try and use it outside of an emergency to approach to 200 and 1/2....
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How about my steam gauges?
Look, I think WAAS GPS is great, and I'm a big proponent, but I do not want to fly as a passenger with the pilot that considers it minimum to get the job done.
What’s wrong with steam gauges? I’ve flown many approaches to 1800 rvr with just the needles. Don’t care if it’s ILS or LPV. But either way it’s certified equipment before I trust my life to it. LPV is probably a more stable signal generally tho...
WAAS has nothing to do with pretty screens synthetic vision and all that...
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If you already have an old 530 or 530W, keep it—it will still get the job done, if a little awkwardly; if you don't already have one, don't waste money buying and installing worn-out tech that's already 21 years out of date.A non-WAAS 530 is weak avionics?
Sheesh, some people rely on wheelchairs for crutches. Sheesh, spend an AMU or so and get a Stratus with Foreflight and bam, you have synthetic vision. If you need.
Okay I guess I didn't understand your point. I would assume that the 182 in question was equipped with such. I thought you were trying to convey to the OP that WAAS GPS was a basic requirement for low IFR.
Noway IMO.
You can get a GNS175 or 375 installed for under 10k.
How about my steam gauges?
Look, I think WAAS GPS is great, and I'm a big proponent, but I do not want to fly as a passenger with the pilot that considers it minimum to get the job done.