Kai wrote:Mark’s latest safety posting:
<snipped - RRY>
BUT
Now Mark writes something along the lines of:……. This reinforces the need for all builders of homebuilt aircraft to install an AOA device, preferably with an acoustic signal…….
That’s news! Is this the new Sonex policy?
I didn't read Mark's message that way.
It felt like a bit of reaction to Graeme's work on accidents and incidents, which I at least found a little dis-heartening. I saw Mark opening up a dialog, and engaging with one of the Homebuilt world's most studious and careful compiler of accident statistics. My take aways:
1. Sonex accident rates are roughly in line with other experimentals.
2. Experimental hours flown are going up, and the accident rate is going down.
3. We as a community can still do better, and AOA indication is one of the things EAA is looking at, in an industry working group, which Sonex is a part of.
AOA indication has been a feature of general aviation for a LONG time. The vane type sensors were invented in the 1940s. Reed type stall horns have been installed on every Cessna 100 series since, what, the 1970's? But even these simple AOA indicators ("Idiot Lights" rather than gauges) are rare in homebuilts, including Sonex, even though Tony Bingelis described how to do it back in the 1980's (
https://www.eaa.org/eaa/aircraft-buildi ... ng-devices?), and there have been several articles in Sport Aviation and Kitplanes since then. I, for one, think we can do better, and it sounds like Sonex feels that way too.
That alone is not going to make Experimental aviation as safe as walking to the corner mailbox (I wish we had a better system for transition training, but I know that various people are working on that issue), but it's a step.
As to myself, the next time I fly the aero club's Cherokee, we are going to practice engine out during climb scenarios, by establishing VsubY climb, and then pulling power, and pitching down to establish VsubG. I'm also going to see if I can arrange some instruction in a local low wing LSA, and practice the same maneuvers.