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#11
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On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 16:51:57 +0900, Stealth Pilot wrote:
On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 12:09:54 -0700, Ron Wanttaja wrote: ... but not only does it apparently feature a LOT of locks up forward, the canopy should have been the first item to depart the airframe had it come open. It would have been found with the personal items that came out. Ron Wanttaja it is tragic to see the number of people killed in lancairs. canopies seem to have little to do with it. the design seems so optimised for high speed flight that people regularly come unstuck in the slow speed regime. at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! |
#12
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On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 12:57:43 -0400, Gezellig
wrote: On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 16:51:57 +0900, Stealth Pilot wrote: On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 12:09:54 -0700, Ron Wanttaja wrote: ... but not only does it apparently feature a LOT of locks up forward, the canopy should have been the first item to depart the airframe had it come open. It would have been found with the personal items that came out. Ron Wanttaja it is tragic to see the number of people killed in lancairs. canopies seem to have little to do with it. the design seems so optimised for high speed flight that people regularly come unstuck in the slow speed regime. at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! that is a fact. sadly. it came up unexpectedly when an atsb chap was grinding a spreadsheet on aircraft types to work out what were inherently the safest designs. sadly the lancair is at the very other end of the spectrum by a long shot. ...in australia. Stealth Pilot |
#13
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![]() "Stealth Pilot" wrote in message ... On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 12:57:43 -0400, Gezellig wrote: On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 16:51:57 +0900, Stealth Pilot wrote: On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 12:09:54 -0700, Ron Wanttaja wrote: ... but not only does it apparently feature a LOT of locks up forward, the canopy should have been the first item to depart the airframe had it come open. It would have been found with the personal items that came out. Ron Wanttaja it is tragic to see the number of people killed in lancairs. canopies seem to have little to do with it. the design seems so optimised for high speed flight that people regularly come unstuck in the slow speed regime. at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! that is a fact. sadly. it came up unexpectedly when an atsb chap was grinding a spreadsheet on aircraft types to work out what were inherently the safest designs. sadly the lancair is at the very other end of the spectrum by a long shot. ...in australia. Stealth Pilot How many completed Lancairs, especally Legacies, were included? Peter |
#14
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 10:02:22 -0400, Peter Dohm wrote:
"Stealth Pilot" wrote in message ... On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 12:57:43 -0400, Gezellig wrote: On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 16:51:57 +0900, Stealth Pilot wrote: On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 12:09:54 -0700, Ron Wanttaja wrote: ... but not only does it apparently feature a LOT of locks up forward, the canopy should have been the first item to depart the airframe had it come open. It would have been found with the personal items that came out. Ron Wanttaja it is tragic to see the number of people killed in lancairs. canopies seem to have little to do with it. the design seems so optimised for high speed flight that people regularly come unstuck in the slow speed regime. at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! that is a fact. sadly. it came up unexpectedly when an atsb chap was grinding a spreadsheet on aircraft types to work out what were inherently the safest designs. sadly the lancair is at the very other end of the spectrum by a long shot. ...in australia. Stealth Pilot How many completed Lancairs, especally Legacies, were included? Peter And what would be next in the line of infamous, present day designs? |
#15
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![]() "Gezellig" wrote in message ... On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 10:02:22 -0400, Peter Dohm wrote: "Stealth Pilot" wrote in message ... On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 12:57:43 -0400, Gezellig wrote: On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 16:51:57 +0900, Stealth Pilot wrote: On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 12:09:54 -0700, Ron Wanttaja wrote: ... but not only does it apparently feature a LOT of locks up forward, the canopy should have been the first item to depart the airframe had it come open. It would have been found with the personal items that came out. Ron Wanttaja it is tragic to see the number of people killed in lancairs. canopies seem to have little to do with it. the design seems so optimised for high speed flight that people regularly come unstuck in the slow speed regime. at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! that is a fact. sadly. it came up unexpectedly when an atsb chap was grinding a spreadsheet on aircraft types to work out what were inherently the safest designs. sadly the lancair is at the very other end of the spectrum by a long shot. ...in australia. Stealth Pilot How many completed Lancairs, especally Legacies, were included? Peter And what would be next in the line of infamous, present day designs? My point is that, if at that time, two Lancair Legacies were flying in Australia and one of them crashed; then that would have been a 50% loss. However, it would have been a meaningless statistic--which, regrettably, is not uncommon. Therefore, I have enquired as to whether the data was statistically significant. Peter |
#16
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 19:10:31 -0400, Peter Dohm wrote:
"Gezellig" wrote in message ... On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 10:02:22 -0400, Peter Dohm wrote: "Stealth Pilot" wrote in message ... On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 12:57:43 -0400, Gezellig wrote: On Mon, 27 Oct 2008 16:51:57 +0900, Stealth Pilot wrote: On Sun, 26 Oct 2008 12:09:54 -0700, Ron Wanttaja wrote: ... but not only does it apparently feature a LOT of locks up forward, the canopy should have been the first item to depart the airframe had it come open. It would have been found with the personal items that came out. Ron Wanttaja it is tragic to see the number of people killed in lancairs. canopies seem to have little to do with it. the design seems so optimised for high speed flight that people regularly come unstuck in the slow speed regime. at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! that is a fact. sadly. it came up unexpectedly when an atsb chap was grinding a spreadsheet on aircraft types to work out what were inherently the safest designs. sadly the lancair is at the very other end of the spectrum by a long shot. ...in australia. Stealth Pilot How many completed Lancairs, especally Legacies, were included? Peter And what would be next in the line of infamous, present day designs? My point is that, if at that time, two Lancair Legacies were flying in Australia and one of them crashed; then that would have been a 50% loss. However, it would have been a meaningless statistic--which, regrettably, is not uncommon. Therefore, I have enquired as to whether the data was statistically significant. Peter Agreed. My question is, whether or not the Lanc stats are significant, are there other statistically significant sets of data that point to "killer" design flaws. |
#17
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 23:00:28 -0400, Gezellig
wrote: at one stage 50% of australian built lancairs had killed their builders and passenger in slow speed flight fatal incidents. tragic. Stealth Pilot I'm not doubting you but is that a pure cite or a guess. If a cite, then Holy ****! How many completed Lancairs, especally Legacies, were included? every australian aircraft. dont know the figure because the details were related to me by the atsb guy himself. I never saw his spreadsheet. probably 10 as a ballpark. http://www.atsb.gov.au/publications/...ationStats.pdf this link is a 375kb download which will show the fatality rates in australia. it doesnt allow me to segregate figures by aircraft type. Peter And what would be next in the line of infamous, present day designs? My point is that, if at that time, two Lancair Legacies were flying in Australia and one of them crashed; then that would have been a 50% loss. However, it would have been a meaningless statistic--which, regrettably, is not uncommon. Therefore, I have enquired as to whether the data was statistically significant. Peter Agreed. My question is, whether or not the Lanc stats are significant, are there other statistically significant sets of data that point to "killer" design flaws. I think there were 5 or 6 or 7 fatalities. I dont have the figures. for australia the figure was significant. Stealth Pilot |
#18
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2008 19:10:31 -0400, "Peter Dohm" wrote:
My point is that, if at that time, two Lancair Legacies were flying in Australia and one of them crashed; then that would have been a 50% loss. However, it would have been a meaningless statistic--which, regrettably, is not uncommon. Therefore, I have enquired as to whether the data was statistically significant. Yep. Several homebuilt types have similar annual US fleet accident rates as Lancairs (examples: Velocity, RANS, Zenair) but the sample sizes vary so much that one or two accidents more or less can make a real difference. I suspect the Aussie fleet is quite a bit smaller. We also have to consider our definition of "Lancair." Is it fair to lump a Lancair Legacy with a Lancair IVP? Is it fair to lump a Lancair ES with the original Lancair O-235 (which had a REALLY small tail)? If you don't...then your sample size gets a lot smaller and your data is less reliable. How many of those ten Lancairs in Australia were Legacies? That said, the original two-seat Lancairs did have trouble getting certified in Australia, way back when. They used to require flight testing of homebuilts just like production aircraft, and the government test pilots rejected the Lancair due to its handling qualities. Ron Wanttaja |
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