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Old December 31st 04, 03:27 PM
Dan Luke
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" jls" wrote:
http://www.seqair.com/FlightTest/Kil...lYourself.html


From the article:
"Overall the safety record of homebuilt aircraft is not greatly
different from production aircraft."

The author provides no evidence. Where are the numbers?

Some people want to fly faster than that 130 mph Cessna of yours


That's a 155 mph Cessna, son.

[snip]

Check out the graph here too:

http://www.provide.net/~pratt1/ambuilt/faqhmblt.htm


What part of the graph has anything to say about the safety numbers of
homebuilts?

Experimentals are here to stay.


Really? Gosh!

[snip]

If you have any numbers other than sneering, please provide them.


Experimentals comprise 10.4% of the GA fleet
http://makeashorterlink.com/?U1842322A but, according to the 2003 ASF
Nall report, historically produce 17% of the fatal accidents. From the
report:

"Comparison with Factory Aircraft:
In 2002, homebuilt airplanes were involved in 196 accidents. Of these,
60 fatal accidents resulted in 79 fatalities. Factory-built airplanes
in 2002 were involved in 1,276 accidents, of which 252 were fatal with
439 fatalities. Just over 30 percent of homebuilt aircraft accidents
resulted in fatalities, and 19.7 percent of the accidents in
factory-built airplanes were fatal. As in prior years, it appears that
there is a significantly higher risk of fatality in the event of an
accident in a homebuilt aircraft compared to a factory-built machine.
Although fatal homebuilt aircraft accidents decreased dramatically in
2000, they increased to 19.2 percent in 2002. Historically, homebuilt
aircraft are involved in approximately 17 percent of all fatal
accidents."

Hope this helps.


Ditto.
--
Dan
C172RG at BFM