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In 7000 hours I had one engine "failure," which was just a loose hose
between the turbocharger and intake manifold. Engine didn't really fail, it just lost boost on that side. I've had some engine anomalies, but nothing that would meet the definition of failure. I would tend to agree that honest-to-goodness failures are very rare when considered in the context of total operating hours for all powered aircraft. Bob Gardner "Captain Wubba" wrote in message om... Howdy. I was discussing with a friend of mine my concerns about flying single-engine planes at night or in hard IFR, due to the possibility of engine failure. My buddy is a CFI/CFII/ATP as well as an A&P, about 3500 hours, and been around airplanes for a long time, so I tend to give credence to his experiences. He asked me how often I thought a piston engine had an in-flight engine failure. I guestimated once every 10,000 hours or so. He said that was *dramatically* over-estimating the failure rate. He said that in his experience it is at least 40,000 to 50,000 hours per in-flight engine failure. The place where he works sometimes as a mechanic has plenty of planes come in for overhauls and annuals, and he estimates that for every plane that has had an engine failure before TBO, at least 20-30 make it to TBO without any failure (which would extrapolate to a similar figure). The flight school he teaches at has 7 Cessnas used for primary training and rental that have flown at least 40,000 hours total in the six years he has been there, and they have not experienced a single engine failure. I emailed Lycoming, and (unsurprisingly) they told me they did not keep records about engine failure rates. So I'd like to find out if anyone has done any objective analysis of certificated, piston-engine failure rates in light airplanes. I have seen all kinds of 'guesses', but little in the way of objective facts. After analyzing NTSB accident data and comparing to annual GA flight-hours, I'm starting to think my friend is on the right track, but that is a relatively small sample, and has some methodologial flaws. It's funny. I know 20,000 hour CFIs who have never had an engine failure, and I also know 300 hour PP-ASELs who have had engine failures. Just for giggles, I asked 8 pilot friends/relatives if they had ever had an engine failure. The only 'yes' was a relative who lost an engine after takeoff on his first solo cross-country in 1958. And I know one other pilot who had an engine failure, who I wasn't able to talk to. So what is it? If the engine-failure rate is one failure for every 50,000 flight hours, I'll feel much less reticent about night/IFR single-engine flying than if it is one in 10,000 hours. Anybody have any facts or hard data, or have any idea where I might be able to track some down? Thanks, Cap |
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