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A: An airplane accident is harder to walk away from than a car accident, so for example, GA flying is more risky than the equivalent level of driving. This is obvious, I don't need to say any more.
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Where are the numbers that show that? Using the links that I provided and the data from 2002:
Car occupant, deaths = 16,337 odds 1 in 17,625
Occupant of pick-up truck or van deaths = 4,286 odds 1 in 67,182
Air and space transport accidents, deaths = 653 odds 1 in 440,951
In 2002 there were
543 deaths in Part 91 GA aircraft. I rec'd those numbers using a simple query from the NTSB database. (I have teh excel sheet saved if you'd like to see it).Using the 2002 US population of 287,941,220. If you divide the population by the number of GA deaths you will get a number
1 in 530,278 for your odds of dying in a GA crash. Compare that to the numbers above for car and or truck and it is far safer in a GA Aircraft than driving a car or truck.
Now there is some proof/numbers to my point and many others. Can you show some verifiable numbers to support your point?
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okay, I think swen was on the right track. I doubt there are many unicycle fatalities on the highway, so therefore unicycle is the safest wat to travel!
Using the total us pop to determine deaths is flawed. Not everyone is a passenger in GA. I know people who haven't even been in any airplane...cletus, big bertha, etc...just kidding, they just don't go anywhere...but almost everyone has been a passenger in a car or truck/bus. Using
highways admin's fact sheet , (third paragraph) the rate of fatalities/accidents on the highway was about .67%, compared to about 20% for GA that someone mentioned above. This is a solid stat: number of people killed in car accidents on the highway vs people killed in GA accidents. The human body can only take so much trauma force before you die. Airplanes move much faster, aren't volvos, don't have arbags, all of which are contributing factors to less survivibility. Sidenote: until WWI, the total US fatal accidents involving a car > total US soldiers killed in all wars until WWI.