Jethro Belle Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Hello all who read this, Sorry for adding bandwidth, but the nag pop-up insists I post to this thread. My flying status is "inactive" except for PC flight simulator and CFD. I was following the Small aircraft crashworthiness thread and was interested in some attachments so had to register! I started learning on a Scout Mk3 (so don't take it I don't take risks) in the 80s, but after seeing the results of poor crashworthiness (not just on Scouts) required due to poor piloting and ill-conceived aircraft modifications/builds, I decided the inevitable expensive painful stay in hospital followed by life in a wheelchair was not for me as a learning experience. Watching such events close up and personal really shakes one's confidence and makes the need for risk mitigation crystal clear. I am looking to getting a safe aircraft when I will no longer feel guilty indulging myself while my children still need me: Sound familiar? The Small aircraft crashworthiness thread has been excellent reading with special thanks to Dafydd Llewellyn for his excellent, balanced and authoritative input. When you really know what you are talking about you should not be expected word it as humble opinion, no matter how humble you are in person. Poor piloting decisions made under pressure and limited time can be forgiven more easily than poor primary, secondary and tertiary aircraft safety decisions to which time and sense can be used until the risk is brought below the level you are willing to take. To quote the cliché that has kept me safe so far: "There are old pilots and bold (meaning those with poor judgment who do not mitigate risk) pilots, but there are no old bold pilots." I hope one day to be, and remain to be, an able bodied old pilot :-) If you have an 'safe' unmodified quality factory built new plane, designed and maintained to all requirements my concern may seem excessive, however I am looking at the experimental aircraft category due to my engineering background and finances ;-). It is the thrill of flying, not the adrenaline rush created by surviving another flight that attracts me. Sorry for rambling on, but it will probably be my last for a long while. Thanks again to all for your constructive informative postings, Jethro 2
Litespeed Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Hey Jethro, If your looking for a tough as nails, easy to fly but not bus like aircraft with exceptional crash survivability, then a local product is what you want. It is called a Jabiru, can be kit or factory built. Lots on market and cheap compared to any imports. If you absolutely have to impact the ground or a tree or a riverbank etc- it is the machine. It is easy to kill yourself or get mangled in any aircraft. But history has proven you have to try real hard in a jabiru, the cabin structure is amazingly tough and absorbs a lot of forces instead of transferring it to the pilot. Manage your engine well, maintain it well, keep fuel in the tanks and fly to its envelope. If it all goes really wrong- there is nothing I would rather be in. Physics is a cruel mistress but a Jabiru can be a fairy godmother. The only fatalities I know of where A flight into a mountainside - cumulus granite. Wings torn off in a very powerful storm cloud in Europe. A nose first vertical into the ground after stalling. All were pilot error and generally non survivable in anything with wings. I would always trust one. Litespeed 4 1
facthunter Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Congrats on your first post Jethro.. If you go for EXP GA Look at the stuff from Taree. AAK.. Nev 1 1
Litespeed Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Yes, Nev- Ole Hartman at AAK makes awesome aircraft. Tough as iron bark and can land where you would normally rip off the undercarriage. 1 1
Jethro Belle Posted July 15, 2018 Author Posted July 15, 2018 Hey Jethro,If your looking for a tough as nails, easy to fly but not bus like aircraft with exceptional crash survivability, then a local product is what you want. It is called a Jabiru. I would always trust one. Litespeed Thanks for confirming their reputation for being safe airframe Litespeed. The Small aircraft crashworthiness thread contains a few posts about front of the cab collapse, that I will reread. I am not anti-fibre composite and at least partial CFRP is the future for commercial aircraft for most fliers IMHO, but something like a cheaper affordable version of http://www.worldrecordplane.com/ Sonerai 2L has my attention currently. I have flown in Eugene Reid’s very nice Jabiru LSA 55/3J. A J400 on VH rego would allow me to fly my regular trip to Canberra across Bass Straight with family, if I bring active flying forwards. My concern with Jabiru's has always been the engine (A Bass Straight ditching is not nice, safe or cheap). Steel liners and other problems I saw with early engines have translated to Jabiru's reputation today (Purely my perception). It is an impressive engine, given how hard it is to build any commercial engine (Porsche found out when it tried an aero engine), but primary risk removal is the best safety measure from my perspective as a purchaser. If D-Motor can overcome their own serious problems, the new D-motor will add futher pressure from the opposite end of aero engine design to the Rotax, so hopefully Jabiru turns this major issue around. Achieving typical engine life equal to their specified TBO is preventing me getting one as their prices are good. Thanks again for your welcome and input,
Litespeed Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 The vast majority of problems with Jabiru engines are poor maintenance, not running at correct revs and a bad rep that is generally completely undeserved. In flight stoppage is extremely rare, if it has fuel and spark they keep running. CASA claimed lack of fuel in the tank as a engine failure. As far as tbo goes even if they are rebuilt at 50% tbo it is still cheaper than a rotax which is a basic replace everything bar the cases overhaul. If your worried about failure do the island hop route to Tassie. 3 1 1
Litespeed Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Adding injection makes a Jabiru 6 purr like a pussykat 1
Jethro Belle Posted July 15, 2018 Author Posted July 15, 2018 Yes, Nev- Ole Hartman at AAK makes awesome aircraft. Tough as iron bark and can land where you would normally rip off the undercarriage. Thank you for alerting me to Australian Aircraft Kits facthunter. I found Ole's great web site and his planes look as described. I should have noted my aircraft requirement is a quiet tourer with good visibility, that can cover distance fast and economically while enjoying Australia from the air. Ideally it would be amphibious so I could go to the lakes, wilderness and islands around Tasmania (an offer better odds in a sea ditching), but that is too incompatible with my key requirements and finances. I am now looking at the safety of various candidate planes and building one to suit based on a proven aircraft like the Sonerai is an option. I think the 'delicate' planes that match my requirements do not have to be unsafe if crashed, just as tin can cars of today can achieve reasonable crash safety by cleverly engineered design optimisation. I recall a friend who lay on a bed in his office, to cope with the pain of his broken/fixed spine, for several years after crashing his amphibian on take-off (due I believe to slight leakage into the fuselage with insufficient baffling to prevent serious mass transfer upon rotation, though the crash report never concluded it). His wife nearly drowned being caught in her harness and he saved her by diving on the wreck (with minimal use of his legs)! It makes me take safety really serious and question options that may at first seem safer options, especially for sea crossings. 1
Jethro Belle Posted July 15, 2018 Author Posted July 15, 2018 In flight stoppage is extremely rare, if it has fuel and spark they keep running. CASA claimed lack of fuel in the tank as a engine failure. As far as tbo goes even if they are rebuilt at 50% tbo it is still cheaper than a rotax which is a basic replace everything bar the cases overhaul. . Thanks for the reassurance about Jabiru inflight engine safety Litespeed. I haven't researched the data or found the reliability statistics as you have. Do you have a report or site link? I am going on what associates believe, a few web discussions from around the world and my own inspection of internals from early Jabiru motors. I am not an expert and have no vested interest except my own safety. I would like Jabiru to keep being a commerical worldwide success, so believe they have to address this perception (reality?) somehow. Things like touch-and-go thermal shock sensitivity and uneven cylinder head temperatures ... seem beyond the "pilot/maintenance" responsibility IMHO. A lot of posters don't like Jabiru because they claim Jabiru have said "Its your fault"! I see precious few recommending the Jabiru motor (usually "here is an alternative" or "her is a Jabiru motor upgrade/fix"). I think this should probably posted elsewhere. Thanks again for keeping the perspective balanced.
Jethro Belle Posted July 15, 2018 Author Posted July 15, 2018 Adding injection makes a Jabiru 6 purr like a pussykat Yes, a fuel injected, water cooled heads, treated liners, 6cyl in a J400 is attractive to me Sweeeet On a lighter note, I love your profile picture. You have to love the Stealth SSDR Archon SF-1
Litespeed Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Yes the SF1 is a cool little beasty. I picked that photo because I love the plane and the pilot is a doppelganger of me- minus my grey hair. There are lots of threads re the Jabiru motor etc on the site, have a read. But keep in mind some posters are very biased for or against a Jabiru, irrespective of the actual facts. Shock cooling/icing is a issue in any carb engine, and yes the ultimate solution is a modern injection system and rotec heads. Modern ceramic coatings are also worthy additions. And such a motor would still be cheaper than a rotax. 1
Litespeed Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Regarding failure of the 'A' pillars that is at extreme g loading in a crash and greatly reduces the G load into the pilot cabin and that can be a life saver. Similar to modern cars crumple zones, the best design will crush/disgard structure to take up g Loads and save the pilot. Humans are very poor at absorbing big g loads. 1
turboplanner Posted July 15, 2018 Posted July 15, 2018 Regarding failure of the 'A' pillars that is at extreme g loading in a crash and greatly reduces the G load into the pilot cabin and that can be a life saver. Similar to modern cars crumple zones, the best design will crush/disgard structure to take up gLoads and save the pilot. Humans are very poor at absorbing big g loads. That's not correct; A pillar failure is a serious issue because it allows the engine to drop down and flop around, usually taking the firewall with it; it's usually a failure in tension rather than compression and opens the occupants to serious injury. It can be caused simply by harmonics in an open paddock which has been cultivated, where you would least expect to be injured of killed. 1
facthunter Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 I just would not do the bass straight crossing on any thing other than a reasonable twin or a turbo prop. Low wing U'Ls are a risk on overturning on the ground without some way of keeping the plane from preventing you exiting the cockpit. Rough sea landings with a seaplane are not safe. A significant swell makes for big risk even on full size stuff. Walrus excepted, perhaps.. Having the engine in front of you gives some protection. It smashes small trees shrubs and branches etc. Prangs at high speed are risky as the energy must be absorbed over a time to reduce damage to you.. Faster planes are not safe to do outlandings. Your stall speed is important but that often comes with a lower cruise speed. 95 knots is enough. Faster costs a lot more. Flying in cloud is a consistent killer of untrained pilots. Owning your own plane is good for making it the safest possible. If you share a hangar make sure the others don't park theirs by bumping your's out of the way. Just a few thoughts. Nev. 2
Jethro Belle Posted July 16, 2018 Author Posted July 16, 2018 Shock cooling/icing is a issue in any carb engine, and yes the ultimate solution is a modern injection system and rotec heads. Modern ceramic coatings are also worthy additions. And such a motor would still be cheaper than a rotax. I think you are mistaking “shock-cooling” for carb-icing. I had never heard about it either, until I looked into Jabiru Engine reliability. It seems to be the big issue discussed about Jab Engines at the moment, and one that the water cooled heads (ie: Rotec) claim to cure. I think it was Jabiru Owners Group Rotec W/C Heads postings that made me mention it. As I understand the terminology usage is as defined by Shock cooling - WikiVividly and/or wikipedia The claim is that early Jab failure is common where many touch and goes are performed (I haven't found the direct link sorry). If true it means flight schools will never meet the TBO, so it should be possible to show if statistically differences between trainers and cross-country planes exist. Jabawocky doesn’t believe in shock cooling. Shock Cooling - Myth Busted!! - PPRuNe Forums. I think it is rapid thermal cycling, and https://www.casa.gov.au/file/169776/download?token=BcnNQEBY indicates issues with Jab engine through 3/8” bolts, so I suspect thermal cycling was not been completely allowed for in their original design and any long term cyclic engine testing by Jabiru has not picked it up. I did say before, bringing any new engine to market is not easy, but when debugging (think poorly developed software) is done by customers it can fatally damage reputation (The Lotus motor killed Jensen Motors when Lotus used the Jensen Healy as a Guiney pig). The thread ‘CHT for Jabiru 6cyl’ suggests CHT and heads on Jabs are an issue. jetjr says multiple CHT are essential for the six. I realise that it could be pilots running the engines too hard for too long (as you indicate), rather than a Jabiru engine problem, or shock cooling and that you can’t make generalisations about all engines. I am not anti-Jabiru Engines (Lotus engines are good engines, but...). I am performing due diligence risk assessment (a responsibility on all aircraft owners) to protect myself and passengers. That means the claims must be assessed somehow and until it is that option remains risky. Jabiru reputation (and any reality behind it) has to be addressed by Jabiru, if it is to win back opinion as expressed on websites across the globe. That will require hard data and clear demonstrations of reliability/TBO. I hope my posting are not read as direct judgement as I am not in a position to make such, and think my post identify ‘commonly held belief’ and seek objective confiration or correction like you have provided. Thankyou :-)
Jethro Belle Posted July 16, 2018 Author Posted July 16, 2018 I just would not do the bass straight crossing on any thing other than a reasonable twin or a turbo prop. Low wing U'Ls are a risk on overturning on the ground without some way of keeping the plane from preventing you exiting the cockpit. Rough sea landings with a seaplane are not safe. A significant swell makes for big risk even on full size stuff. Walrus excepted, perhaps.. ... Nev. Yes to all you say Nev, which is why I am not rushing into anything until I tie down the risks of available options a LOT more. We don’t need more bad press and court cases from botched crossings. Your concerns are a good starting point. Thank you My Jabiru engine related posts are driven by my absolute fear of engine failure over water. The good Jabiru crash worthiness into paddocks is only part of any risk mitigation (Not suggesting Jabirus are worse than anything else in water ditching as I have no data yet). I would love a twin or turbo prop if I had a few million dollars Oh yeah. My mention of the Sonerai is to give others who are lind enough to care a starting point idea of the performance I aspire to and budget I would like to match. Safety wise I think the CrMo fuselage is it's key safety feature, and I hadn't thought of flight over water safety for the Sonerai (I am pretty sure several have flown across Bass Straight). Like most people I want massive performance, no noise, great comfort, good flight characterisitcs, VTOL and safety and reliability ... at a price below that at which it is possible I was advised by my friend who ditched his amphibian that a small one offers little advantage in a sea diching’s unless it is millpond calm, which is why I was willing to omit them as an option. Thankyou for confirming that a small amphibian is of marginal advantage. I was planning to buy a Consolidated Catalina with two noisy things, until I broke open my piggy bank If I develop anything worthy, or have further questions, I will post to the Flights over water or Bass Straight crossing threads after researching a lot more. Since building my own aeroplane is not out of the question, the safe design and build features for sea diching in a non-amphibian are high on my to list. I will post it, if I produce/collate something worthy enough. If my risk assessment is that I cannot get/build a plane that can cross Bass Straight at an acceptable risk, I will focus on a local flying options and keep making make Sir R Branson or the little Irishman cover the flight risks PS: Is the jet powered Cri Cri a reasonable twin IYHO? LOL, roll about laughting 1
pmccarthy Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 If crossing Bass Strait imho Rotax 912 and Lycoming are equally reliable. Have no experience of the others. 1
turboplanner Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 Cross Bass Strait by Jetstar, hire an ac in Tasmania, cheaper, faster, safer, and hours less planning. 1
SSCBD Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 My question is who would cross Bass Strait in an single engine at any time in any RAA aircraft or single engine GA. I know people do - but why take this risk to this level. google tells me its around - 238 km ish. of cold death below you. Distance from Bass Strait to Tasmania Suggest you get the Jab twin engine I saw they made somewhere. That would be to me then acceptable. 1
Jethro Belle Posted July 16, 2018 Author Posted July 16, 2018 Thanks to all for all your risk assesments regarding crossing Bass Straight. My question is who would cross Bass Strait in an single engine at any time in any RAA aircraft or single engine GA. I know people do - but why take this risk to this level. Being Tasmania based means getting to things happening on the mainland with your plane leaves you have no choice, and for me flying your own special plane is part of the attraction. For those coming the other way I can see it is a challenge and achievement, like mountain climbing, plus flying your own plane. Buying/Selling planes across the Straight make it inevitable if it is capable. In special jobs where airlines aren't servicing, some people do it to "work commute", I have heard. There are RAA category planes with oxygen fitted capable of flying high enough to make the island hopping route (http://www.recreationalflying.com/threads/crossing-bass-strait.23940/) possible without ever being unable to make land (90% sure, but need to check). I am confident some LSA engines make the category equally reliable and capable as older GA, and don't GA planes make the trip often? I am probably showing my ignorance here, so I expect posts to correct me . At the present I can't see why your (SSCBD) Swiss Risen aircraft, correctly kitted and prepared, could not do it easily. Wouldn't you want to? My risk assessment however may conclude you (SSCBD) are at least partly right and I am worried there is a high risk it will. Has anyone done/aware of an objective risk assessment comparing the Bass Straight Crossing to flying Canberra to Melbourne (or a motorbike at peak hour, or solo yachting across) for instance? Can anyone advise the practical/standard flight risk assessment approach, other than pilot's gut/experience after reviewing the flight path? Obviously this would be very plane-pilot specific with variables like season and safety arrangements having to be tied down. If you survive the crash, flight planning/reporting and EPRIBS/GPS positioning mean you don't have to survive misserable unpleasant shark infested cold water too long (based on reports of those planes that have gone in). That makes it a lot safer than years ago. I am risk averse, but fear should not enter objective aviation risk assesments. That is what the lay public and oldschool wives are for
Jethro Belle Posted July 16, 2018 Author Posted July 16, 2018 Suggest you get the Jab twin engine I saw they made somewhere. That would be to me then acceptable. The concept it a great contender for a 'safe' Bass Strait crossing, hence my checking. Just Googled it and Jabiru J432, Twin Engine Aircraft seems to be it. One aircraft that caused a big flurry in 2013, but still awaiting South African type certification. It seems an SA build with nothing in Australia yet. A Cri Cri version of the Partenavia P.68 is how I would describe it. Pity the engines need such HUGE cowling as they look ugly and must create 200% form drag IMHO. The performance figures look similar to a standard J430 so you are paying for safety. They claim asymmetrical thrust is not that of a traditional standard twin. I have read about standard twins killing most typical GA pilots within a few minutes of engine failure due to their asymmetric thrust causing it to roll and power spin as I recall. It is really nasty to correct and single engine performance is marginal, so the risk reduction offered by a traditional twin barely outweighs their benefit for GA aircraft, and you pay double the engine bills. Twice as many engine failures! It would be great for Jabiru to make this a success as it would counter engine failure concerns and create its own niche aircraft market. Maybe Jabiru engine failure rates have dropped so a twin is less attractive and they are not pushing it to market. The low engine life many have experienced may count against it given that cost is doubled. I suspect many will not be a enthusiastic about it as me.
pmccarthy Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 Would not expect to survive an engine failure over Bass Strait. Nor when flying inland OCTA from Grafton. Or over much of the West Coast of Tasmania. When I first started flying the same applied about much of inland Australia where you could probably land OK but would perish before anyone found you -it’s different now. If you think the chance of an engine failure in your chosen and maintained machine is higher than the chance of a fatal car or motorbike accident then I would not fly over those places. 1
pmccarthy Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 My previous post was poorly worded. I would not expect to survive a ditching in Bass Strait. But if you fly high there are only two or three periods of ten to fifteen minutes when you could not glide to a forced landing or an airstrip. It is more worrying when weather forces you down to 2000 feet for the crossing. But the actual risk to life from engine failure is no greater than flying over the ranges along much of eastern Australia or western and southern Tasmania. All these need assessing and many pilots will choose not to fly in any of those situations. 1 1
turboplanner Posted July 16, 2018 Posted July 16, 2018 Has anyone done/aware of an objective risk assessment comparing the Bass Straight Crossing to flying Canberra to Melbourne (or a motorbike at peak hour, or solo yachting across) for instance? Can anyone advise the practical/standard flight risk assessment approach, other than pilot's gut/experience after reviewing the flight path? Obviously this would be very plane-pilot specific with variables like season and safety arrangements having to be tied down. There are people who have successfully flown RA aircraft across Bass Strait, and one has paddled across in a kayak, and one even made it across on a paddleboard. So it can be done, provided you have the time and patience to wait for a guaranteed calm and VFR crossing, which can be days at a time from each side. The island route has been chosen by many in GA, but some of the islands are so small that even if you could do a spot touch down you would likely bounce off into the swell. After the rescue of an ultralight pilot and his passenger a couple of years ago, possibilities of rescue reasonably close to land have opened up, so the unprotected Nm can be assessed as less, but in Bass Strait itself, no one has ever been rescued from a ditching, and rescue equipped helicopters are still fuel-limited, and have to fly from Melbourne to Gippsland to refuel if a central Strait mission is involved. You have abnormal weather risks, radio transmission risks, engine performance risks, and also a whole lot of others such as a fuel leak, or a control malfunction - the sorts of things easily handled when there are paddocks to drop in on. RA aircraft are not touring aircraft, even though they have been used for trans-Australia hopping. In a genuine touring aircraft, the radios alone are sometimes worth more than the aircraft itself, and total equipment would be too heavy for an RA aircraft. If they are forced down below VHF line of sight transmission, they can keep communicating on HF, over very long distances. Safety equipment (life jacket, raft, food, hypothermia clothing), and any camping equipment would ensure an RA aircraft was operating at the top end of its envelope, which is not ideal for the potential risk. So you are looking at quite an elevated risk above flying the same aircraft over land with plenty of landing spots. You can flight plan Canberra to Melbourne quite safely away from the alpine region. The risk compared to road transport is sky high. About 1200 people per year are killed on Australian roads, but that involves over a billion missions. Even with the current blowout in motorcycle deaths, buying a Harley after never having been on a motor bike is about 20 times safer than normal RA missions. If you survive the crash, flight planning/reporting and EPRIBS/GPS positioning mean you don't have to survive misserable unpleasant shark infested cold water too long (based on reports of those planes that have gone in). That makes it a lot safer than years ago. After the rescue of an ultralight pilot and his passenger a couple of years ago, in the more sheltered Banks Strait, possibilities of rescue reasonably close to land have opened up, so the unprotected Nm can be assessed as less, but in Bass Strait itself, no one has ever been rescued from a ditching, and winch equipped helicopters are still fuel-limited, and have to fly from Melbourne to Gippsland to refuel if a central Strait mission is involved. You will read on these forums of RA GPS failure of up to three in one flight, so that's a potential risk; if you are forced down low, in some areas you will not be able to transmit your position. Normal EPIRB failures are: in the heat of the moment it was completely forgotten and the people evacuated the aircraft leaving it behind; the pilot was incapacitated before he could trigger it etc. If you can counter these, Canberra will have your position immediately, but you still may have to be in the water for several hours. In one case the ditched pilot's position was pinpointed immediately, about the middle of the day. He had adequate thermal and flotation equipment, and airliners were dispatched successively during the day while a helicopter rescue was attempted, but it wasn't possible to complete the round trip back to Gippsland base, and he was lost. I am risk averse, but fear should not enter objective aviation risk assesments. That is what the lay public and oldschool wives are for I don't think fear should enter the decision either, but being objective, the answer is commercial flight to the Mainland, and maybe storing your own aircraft at somewhere like Bacchus Marsh and Lethbridge, or buying a fully equipped touring GA aircraft. The same argument can be put these days if you live in Melbourne and would like to do some flying around Cairns; leg one = Jetstar, then hire locally - easy solution. 1
Jethro Belle Posted July 17, 2018 Author Posted July 17, 2018 RA aircraft are not touring aircraft, even though they have been used for trans-Australia hopping. In a genuine touring aircraft, the radios alone are sometimes worth more than the aircraft itself, and total equipment would be too heavy for an RA aircraft. If they are forced down below VHF line of sight transmission, they can keep communicating on HF, over very long distances. I was thinking there were Long-Ez aircraft RAA registered (a check only revealed several VariEze) and the new crop of carbon fibre aircraft have ranges qualifying them as touring aircraft. I didn't assess the other equipment like avionics, but expected their relentless miniturisation may have made it possible for small aircraft to be fully kitted. Thankyou for adding these to my list to incude in a rigorous assessment . I guess my candidate aircraft have been those previously limited to GA registration. I view the Sonerai as more of a local hard strip aerobat, but Rob Austin's ex-soneri seems capable of touring (and did it)! No, I have no intention of performing intentional aerobatics, just like strong aircraft with Gs up my sleeve. I am aware aircraft I view as closer ANO-95.10 ultralights have made it across Bass Straight, though it is not something I would consider or recommend unless accompanied by a rescue helicopter. I concluded (falsely it seems) a Dyn'Aéro MCR01, or similar (Pipistrel, TL 2000 Sting ...), would easily do it. Clearly the risk assessment task I have set myself needs much more hard information and be based upon a specific aircraft with all installed equipment specified. Physically being easily able to fly the distance at altitude is not the limiting risk anymore. Even with the current blowout in motorcycle deaths, buying a Harley after never having been on a motor bike is about 20 times safer than normal RA missions. WOW. Motorcycle rider deaths were nearly 30 times more than drivers of other vehicles Do you have any refernces/links supporting the Harley risk assesment? Are the deaths from collision or noise LOL. That give >600 times greater risk of dying in the average RA flight than picking up milk and bread:drive:. What risk does that make crossing Bass Straight!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I worry about someone in an SUV taking me out!!!!! Helicopters are only 85 times more dangerous than driving and I fear them too! . I will reconsider based on GA only, or maybe stay on my flight sim where heart attack or dying of old age are the main risks
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