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#41
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Ron Wanttaja wrote:
On Sat, 28 Oct 2006 17:10:46 GMT, wrote: If you assume that each aircraft went into service the year of its airworthiness date, you can get the fleet size by year: Actually, that date (fields 229-236) relates more to the current owner, than the manufacture date. That column is labeled as "certificate issue date" in the FAA database and I agree that it changes more often. That's not what I used, though - I used the "airworthiness date", positions 266-273. I know of a couple of aircraft that have changed hands a few times, and the certificate issue date usually tracks the latest change of ownership, but the airworthiness date usually corresponds to the original year of manufacture. Fields 52-55 contain the official "Year Manufactured." Yep, it's still there. I just didn't think of using it when I compiled the data the first time. Nice idea, though...re-run your query using the Year Manufactured, and let's have another look at the data. Here it is, noted with "YOM". I have included the data from my first post, noted with "A/W", for comparison. Total Cirrus Design SR-20 entries in the master file: 597 Total Cirrus Design SR-22 entries in the master file: 2022 SR-20 entries in master file, listed by airworthiness date and by year of manufactu A/W YOM blank 39 39 1981 1 1 1995 0 1 1997 1 0 1998 0 3 1999 5 8 2000 78 78 2001 46 45 2002 84 84 2003 96 94 2004 78 77 2005 86 87 2006 83 80 If you assume that each aircraft went into service the year of its airworthiness date or in its year of manufacture, you can get the fleet size by year: End Fleet size by of A/W YOM 1997 2 2 1998 2 5 1999 7 13 2000 85 91 2001 131 136 2002 215 220 2003 311 314 2004 389 391 2005 475 478 2006 558 558 (through early October) SR-22 entries in master file, listed by airworthiness date and by year of manufactu A/W YOM blank 174 175 2001 121 126 2002 262 267 2003 304 307 2004 431 430 2005 442 445 2006 288 272 Fleet size by year: End Fleet size by of A/W YOM 2001 121 126 2002 383 393 2003 687 700 2004 1118 1130 2005 1560 1575 2006 1848 1847 (through early October) As a comparison, I did the same queries for the Cessna 172, including the models 172, 172[ABCDEFGHIJKLMNPQRS], 172RG, P172D, R172[EGHJK], T172, and CE-172-R172. Because this covers a much longer period of time, some of the assumptions above are not as likely to be valid. Total Cessna 172 entries in the master file: 26697 Cessna 172 entries in master file, listed by airworthiness date and by year of manufactu A/W YOM blank 1825 1040 garbled 13 57 1955 79 107 1956 780 956 1957 540 583 1958 447 543 1959 517 566 1960 494 581 1961 457 493 1962 448 509 1963 608 678 1964 782 862 1965 901 1010 1966 909 1069 1967 507 569 1968 765 912 1969 721 708 1970 438 483 1971 463 476 1972 625 658 1973 979 1023 1974 1065 1149 1975 1202 1313 1976 1387 1468 1977 1430 1443 1978 1289 1368 1979 1294 1257 1980 880 811 1981 725 691 1982 248 222 1983 163 87 1984 159 143 1985 157 180 1986 97 81 1987 23 0 1988 27 3 1989 41 0 1990 42 0 1991 21 0 1992 38 0 1993 49 0 1994 41 1 1995 48 0 1996 48 1 1997 228 191 1998 344 293 1999 381 355 2000 385 353 2001 295 267 2002 291 248 2003 277 244 2004 216 181 2005 312 292 2006 196 170 Fleet size by year: End Fleet size by of A/W YOM 1955 79 107 1956 859 1063 1957 1399 1646 1958 1846 2189 1959 2363 2755 1960 2857 3336 1961 3314 3829 1962 3762 4338 1963 4370 5016 1964 5152 5878 1965 6053 6888 1966 6962 7957 1967 7469 8526 1968 8234 9438 1969 8955 10146 1970 9393 10629 1971 9856 11105 1972 10481 11763 1973 11460 12786 1974 12525 13935 1975 13727 15248 1976 15114 16716 1977 16544 18159 1978 17833 19527 1979 19127 20784 1980 20007 21595 1981 20732 22286 1982 20980 22508 1983 21143 22595 1984 21302 22738 1985 21459 22918 1986 21556 22999 1987 21579 22999 1988 21606 23002 1989 21647 23002 1990 21689 23002 1991 21710 23002 1992 21748 23002 1993 21797 23002 1994 21838 23003 1995 21886 23003 1996 21934 23004 1997 22162 23195 1998 22506 23488 1999 22887 23843 2000 23272 24196 2001 23567 24463 2002 23858 24711 2003 24135 24955 2004 24351 25136 2005 24663 25428 2006 24859 25598 (through early October) John Smith posted the following: Accidents and incidents (from theFAA and NTSB databases) 1998 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 SR20 1 0 2 3 0 1 2 7 SR22 - - 2 2 3 8 12 15 Using that data along with the fleet size data: SR-20 Fleet % accidents End size by Acci- by of A/W YOM dents A/W YOM 1997 2 2 0 0 0 1998 2 5 1 50 20 1999 7 13 0 0 0 2000 85 91 0 0 0 2001 131 136 2 1.5 1.5 2002 215 220 3 1.4 1.3 2003 311 314 0 0 0 2004 389 391 1 0.26 0.26 2005 475 478 2 0.42 0.42 2006 558 558 7 1.3 1.3 (through early October) SR-22 Fleet % accidents End size by Acci- by of A/W YOM dents A/W YOM 2001 121 126 2 1.7 1.6 2002 383 393 2 0.52 0.51 2003 687 700 3 0.44 0.43 2004 1118 1130 8 0.72 0.71 2005 1560 1575 12 0.77 0.76 2006 1848 1847 15 0.81 0.81 (through early October) Combined SR-20 and SR-22 Fleet % accidents End size by Acci- by of A/W YOM dents A/W YOM 1997 2 2 0 0 0 1998 2 5 1 50 20 1999 7 13 0 0 0 2000 85 91 0 0 0 2001 252 262 4 1.6 1.5 2002 598 613 5 0.84 0.82 2003 998 1014 3 0.30 0.30 2004 1507 1521 9 0.59 0.59 2005 2035 2053 14 0.69 0.68 2006 2406 2405 21 0.87 0.87 (through early October) Finally, taking the combined SR-20 and SR-22 data for 2001-2006, and applying it to the 172 fleet size, we get an approximate number of accidents and incidents that would be expected from the 172 fleet, if the 172 and SR-20/22 have about the same safety record: Cessna 172 Fleet Expected number of End size by accidents by of A/W YOM A/W YOM 2001 23567 24463 374 373 2002 23858 24711 199 202 2003 24135 24955 72.6 73.8 2004 24351 25136 145 149 2005 24663 25428 170 173 2006 24859 25598 217 224 (through early October) Matt Roberds |
#42
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On Sun, 29 Oct 2006 01:37:47 -0700, I wrote:
I haven't run the fleet accident rates for the Cirrus....guess maybe I'll have to take a look. If, as you say, the accident rate is about 0.75%, that's in the ballpark of the 172. Just completed a cursory look at the accident data. A summary on the process: I previously downloaded the NTSB accident report databases for the years 2002, 2003, and 2004 and developed various database queries to allow analysis of accident causes. I've also downloaded the FAA registration database every January for the past ~7 years. I have developed various tools to allow comparison of accident rates. Rather than compare the Cirrus accident rate to those of the overall fleet of Cessna 172s, I have compared it only to the accidents involving 172s manufactured since 1994 (yes, production started a few year after this point). I have included any Cessna 172 listed with a post-1994 manufacture date, PLUS all Cessna 172R and 172S models since the year of manufacture is not always available). For both aircraft, I have included only those accidents that occurred in the United States. After looking at my tools again, I see my earlier posting mis-stated my method of determining the total fleet size of a particular aircraft. I had stated that I used the January 2005 FAA registration database to determine the fleet size. This is incorrect. In reality, my tool determines the *average* of the fleet size from January 2002 to December 2004. It is this average that is used to calculate the fleet accident rate. There are other ways of making these determinations, but it by using the same processes for both types of aircraft, the *relative* rates for each can be obtained. Ah, the heck with it...on to the data: Cirrus Accidents during subject period: 20 (over a 3-year period) Late-model 172 Accidents: 103(over a 3-year period) Average Cirrus Fleet Size: 783 aircraft Average Late-model 172 Fleet Size: 1993 aircraft Average ANNUAL Fleet Accident Rates: Cirrus: 0.85% Late-Model 172: 1.72% However, here's an interesting point: The C172 is used for instruction, while the Cirrus is not. The NTSB lists none of the 20 Cirrus accidents as occurring during instruction, while 68 of the late-model 172s are so listed. If you eliminate the instruction accidents from the late-model 172 accidents, the 172 rate drops to 0.59% *if* you assume the same fleet size. However, to be an honest comparison, the fleet size would have to address only those aircraft flown for personal pleasure or business...an almost impossible task. In any case, the fleet rate would be higher. From this data, I don't think the Cirrus rate stands out excessively. Ron Wanttaja |
#43
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In article ,
Ron Wanttaja wrote: Average ANNUAL Fleet Accident Rates: Cirrus: 0.85% Late-Model 172: 1.72% However, here's an interesting point: The C172 is used for instruction, while the Cirrus is not. The NTSB lists none of the 20 Cirrus accidents as occurring during instruction, while 68 of the late-model 172s are so listed. If you eliminate the instruction accidents from the late-model 172 accidents, the 172 rate drops to 0.59% *if* you assume the same fleet size. However, to be an honest comparison, the fleet size would have to address only those aircraft flown for personal pleasure or business...an almost impossible task. In any case, the fleet rate would be higher. From this data, I don't think the Cirrus rate stands out excessively. How does the Cirrus rate compare to the late model 182 accident rate, or the late model Bonanza accident rate? Those are more likely to be used for travel, like most Cirrus planes. John -- John Clear - http://www.clear-prop.org/ |
#44
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"Dave Stadt"
One might say that the fatal accident rate seems disproportionate (50% of the SR20, 25% for the SR22 versus 10% for the 172 and 20% for the 182), but at the sample sizes present, there's absolutely no reasonable way to draw any valid statistical conclusion (and note that for the SR22 and the 182, the rates are actually similar). Apples and oranges. The 182 fleet is many times larger than the SR22 fleet. And the 172 fleet is near infinite compared to the Cirrus fleet. The numbers look pretty bad for Cirrus. Did you adjust for the kind of flying done by each? No, you didn't. The flights all involve an equal number of takeoffs and landings only some are more successfull in the landing department than others. Unless you wish to redefine "flight" , no, they don't. Are circuits "flights"? moo |
#45
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#46
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![]() "Happy Dog" wrote in message m... "Dave Stadt" One might say that the fatal accident rate seems disproportionate (50% of the SR20, 25% for the SR22 versus 10% for the 172 and 20% for the 182), but at the sample sizes present, there's absolutely no reasonable way to draw any valid statistical conclusion (and note that for the SR22 and the 182, the rates are actually similar). Apples and oranges. The 182 fleet is many times larger than the SR22 fleet. And the 172 fleet is near infinite compared to the Cirrus fleet. The numbers look pretty bad for Cirrus. Did you adjust for the kind of flying done by each? No, you didn't. The flights all involve an equal number of takeoffs and landings only some are more successfull in the landing department than others. Unless you wish to redefine "flight" , no, they don't. Are circuits "flights"? moo I suspect so. Unless one just motors around on the ground in a big rectangle. |
#47
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"Dave Stadt" wrote
One might say that the fatal accident rate seems disproportionate (50% of the SR20, 25% for the SR22 versus 10% for the 172 and 20% for the 182), but at the sample sizes present, there's absolutely no reasonable way to draw any valid statistical conclusion (and note that for the SR22 and the 182, the rates are actually similar). Apples and oranges. The 182 fleet is many times larger than the SR22 fleet. And the 172 fleet is near infinite compared to the Cirrus fleet. The numbers look pretty bad for Cirrus. Did you adjust for the kind of flying done by each? No, you didn't. The flights all involve an equal number of takeoffs and landings only some are more successfull in the landing department than others. Unless you wish to redefine "flight" , no, they don't. Are circuits "flights"? I suspect so. Unless one just motors around on the ground in a big rectangle. Which would be redefining "circuits". So the flights don't "all involve an equal number of takeoffs and landings". Your desire to engage in semantics aside, Cirruses are not training aircraft. So a direct comparison of "numbers" is really telling us enough about the safety of each plane. Either way. moo |
#48
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Ron,
From this data, I don't think the Cirrus rate stands out excessively. Dick Collins did the same analysis for new 182s and Cirrus. Same result. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#49
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Which would be redefining "circuits". So the flights don't "all involve an
equal number of takeoffs and landings". How so? Is there an accumulation of aircraft in the sky (or on the ground) when one does circuits? When I do them, the number of takeoffs does in fact equal the number of landings. I just do more of them. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#50
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![]() From this data, I don't think the Cirrus rate stands out excessively. Dick Collins did the same analysis for new 182s and Cirrus. Same result. It does seem like the parachute, an occasional a celebrity, amd the inconsistancy of small samples have simply increased the hype factor. Peter |
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