The most common type of homebuilt is the RV, of course, which some might describe as a "hot rod," but most carry the same sort of engines as 172s. But the second most-common types are Zenairs, which don't really fit the moniker, nor do Kitfoxes, the third-place contender. Then come Lancairs (fits the adjective) but then the RANS (which doesn't).
In 2023, the most-common type of new homebuilt was the RV, of course, but the Carbon Cub came in second. Again, not a hot-rod.
Comparing accident rates between homebuilts and production airplanes is a bit awkward for a couple of reasons. First, homebuilt pilots involved in accidents typically have more flight experience. The median total flight time for pilots who have accidents flying homebuilts is about 1000 hours (1998-2022), while the pilots in the Control Group I use (172s and 210s) had a third of that. 172 pilots alone were around 250 hours.
When I started doing these analyses 25 years ago, I was curious whether homebuilts generally have less favorable handling qualities and whether that was contributing to accidents. Haven't found a smoking gun, yet. More than half of homebuilt accidents involve tailwheel airplanes. The rate of Pilot Miscontrol accidents (e.g., stick-and-rudder errors) is slightly higher (43%) vs. the trigear aircraft (38%). And, of course, there aren't many taildraggers in my Control Group.
The bigger factor, though, is engines. All of the Control Group use type-certified engines, while more than half of the homebuilts in accidents are using non-certified engines. About a third of all homebuilt accidents begin with a loss of engine power (sometimes due to pilot action), while the Control Group is about half that.
One advantage of my Control Group is that the total number of 172s and 210s is about the same as the total number of homebuilts. This lets me compare the groups directly, without the misdirection that percentages sometimes imply. This chart compares the two by raw numbers, not percentages:
View attachment 136810
Again, homebuilts come out better in the pilot categories, mostly because the pilots have more experience. The Control Group wins the mechanical-related categories, to a large extent because of the fully-certified engines.
Finally, let me address one aspect of my accident analysis. About five years ago, I did an in-depth study of Vans Aircraft accidents. The RV-10 hasn't yet met my criteria for inclusion (50+ accidents), but the fleet accident rate came out very favorable.
View attachment 136811
The RV-7, 8, and 9 came out with the lowest Fleet Accident rate of the homebuilts I looked at. Note that these rates are actually BELOW the rate for the entire GA fleet.
The full study can be found at:
The RV series has an excellent safety record.
www.kitplanes.com
Ron Wanttaja