Bill Hannahan has some good points. When we compare amateur-built
experimental aircraft to certified aircraft, we need to compare apples to
apples.
1) It's not the airplane's fault if the pilot smacks it into a
mountain.
2) It's not the airplane's fault if the VFR pilot flies into IFR and
crashes. It's probably not the airplane's fault if the IFR pilot scud-runs
and crashes, although handling qualities could potentially play a factor.
3) It's probably not the airplane's fault if the pilot runs out of
gas, but it might be.
4) It's not the airplane's fault that an AD was not complied with and
the propeller fell off, the CG shifted out-of-limits aft, and the pilot lost
control. Or is it? AD compliance is not mandatory for
experimentals. (This is what happened to N320L, an early Lancair 320
factory plane.)
So a more exhaustive examination of accident statistics might reveal that
many experimental airplane crashes are caused by pilot issues, not aircraft
issues. Still, the conventional wisdom is that experimentals are less
safe. I'd be interested in an accident survey that goes back, say, ten
years and compares aircraft-caused crashes and not pilot-caused crashes.
(Hmmm, how do we count handling-quality-related crashes?
Maintenance-related crashes? You see, it's not so easy.)
Bill challenges us to use the freedoms provided under the experimental
aircraft regulations to design and build SAFER airplanes. I think he's
100% right about this. Who will be the first company to offer us the
SAFEST kitplane, not just the highest performance or fastest to build?
You'd think there would be a market opportunity here. After all, it works
for Volvo. (although I'm not really sure that Volvo is safest, but that's what I
keep being told...)
- Rob Wolf
LNC2 80%