Nose-Over and Nose-Down Accidents in General Aviation: Tailwheels and Aging Airplanes

Safety Pub Date : 2024-04-13 DOI:10.3390/safety10020039
Alex de Voogt, Kayla Louteiro
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Abstract

Safety in General Aviation has been a continuous concern. About 12% of all airplane accidents in General Aviation involve nose-overs and nose-down events. A total of 134 accidents reported by the National Transportation Safety Board that include nose-overs and nose-downs were analyzed for their main causes. It was found that 35% of the defining events involved a loss of control on the ground while 58% of the total dataset involved tailwheel-type aircraft. A relatively high proportion of aircraft built before 1950 were found, which are also aircraft that have tailwheel-type landing gear, and thereby a higher propensity for ground loops and nose-overs. It is shown that the high accident rate in General Aviation, especially for accidents that did not result in a fatality, was, to an important extent, explained by tailwheel and older aircraft in the US General Aviation airplane fleet struggling with controlling the aircraft on the ground. Attention to this group of aircraft in future studies may help to more effectively address the relatively high accident rates in General Aviation.
通用航空中的 "机头朝上 "和 "机头朝下 "事故:尾翼和老化的飞机
通用航空的安全问题一直备受关注。在通用航空的所有飞机事故中,约有 12% 的事故涉及机头上翻和机头下坠。美国国家运输安全委员会共报告了 134 起事故,其中包括机头上翻和机头下坠,并对其主要原因进行了分析。结果发现,35% 的定义事件涉及地面失控,而总数据集的 58% 涉及尾轮式飞机。研究发现,1950 年前制造的飞机比例相对较高,这些飞机也是采用尾轮式起落架的飞机,因此更容易发生地面绕圈和机头翻转。研究表明,通用航空事故率高,尤其是未造成人员死亡的事故率高,在很大程度上是由于美国通用航空机队中的尾轮式飞机和老式飞机在地面控制飞机方面存在困难。在今后的研究中关注这一类飞机可能有助于更有效地解决通用航空事故率相对较高的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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