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There's some data in the UK that suggests abou 25 deadly accidents per
million flight hours for GA airplanes. http://www.caa.co.uk/default.aspx/do...90&pageid=6277 Since only a fraction of ga accidents result in death, maybe guess 25%, (maybe less than that, NTSB reports show lots of accidents and not many deaths) it could be there are about 100 accidents for every million hours, but only a fraction of these would be engine failure induced, and not all engine failures result in accidents. It may very well be on average there's an engine stoppage for every 3000 or so operating hours on average, but so far I have not been able to get meaningful data. I'm hoping someone here has a URL to offer that's better than the one I cited. . On May 6, 10:29*am, "Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote: "Tina" wrote in message ... I've read conflicting information on how often SEL airplanes have to land 'right now' because of engine problems. In 3000 hours, most behind an IO 360, we never have had that kind of emergency, but have landed because of alternater failure, having a bank of spark plugs fail, vacuum pump failure, those sorts of things. Someone wrote, and I don't remember if it was supported by hard data, that on average an unavoidable unplanned landing might be as often as every 1500 hours or so. Do you know? Information like that would allow a more reasonable estimate of the risks associated with long overwater (or night IMC IRF -- we do that a lot) flights. I'm sure there are student pilots who have lost an engine on their first solo and there are pilots with thousands of hours that have never had any kind of emergency. Statistics are interesting reading but personal experience varies greatly I'm sure. I'm in the low hundreds as a pilots and haven't has any kind of emergency, I had an engine run rough for a couple seconds in cruise and I have had a couple run ups that were rough enough to warrant leaning the mixture and running the engine up but thankfully I have not had anything major but I'm sure there are pilots out there with equal hours that have had problems. It is just the luck of the draw. |
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