Irregularity of Flight and Slow-Flight Practice Evident for a Subset of Private Pilots—Potential Adverse Impact on Safe Operations
Abstrak
Background: General aviation pilots are, anecdotally, referred to as “weekend warriors” due to their flying infrequency. Considering that flight skills erode with irregular practice/reinforcement, we determined whether private pilots (PPLs) fly/train sufficiently to operate safely in the context of slow flight, a skill critical for safe operations and which rapidly atrophies with <~51 h flight time/8 months per prior research. Method: Slow-flight-related aviation accidents (2008–2019) were per the NTSB Access<sup>R</sup> database, and fatal mishap rates were calculated using general aviation fleet times. Eight-month flight histories of airplanes in single PPL ownership were captured retrospectively using FlightAware<sup>R</sup>. PPL survey responses were collected between January and March 2025. Statistical tests employed proportion/Independent-Samples Median Tests and a Poisson Distribution. Results: The slow-flight-related fatal accident rate (2017–2019) trended downwards (<i>p</i> = 0.077). In-flight tracking of 90 airplanes revealed an 8-month median flight time of 6 h, which is well below the aforementioned 51 h requisite for safe operations. Of the aircraft flown < 51 h, only 9% engaged in slow-flight practice. In the online survey, only the upper quartile of 126 PPLs achieved the aforementioned time requisite for preserving slow-flight skills, but nevertheless, 89% of respondents attested to being flight-proficient. Conclusions: Persistence in slow-flight-related fatal accidents likely partly reflects PPLs’ deficiency in in-flight time/slow-flight practice.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (2)
Douglas D. Boyd
Mark T. Scharf
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/aerospace12100877
- Akses
- Open Access ✓