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Journal Article

Citation

Jarvis S, Harris D. Ergonomics 2009; 52(8): 1009-1018.

Affiliation

Department of Systems Engineering and Human Factors, School of Engineering, Cranfield University, Cranfield, Bedford, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/00140130902836259

PMID

19629815

Abstract

Low-hours solo glider pilots have a high risk of accidents compared to more experienced pilots. Numerous taxonomies for causal accident analysis have been produced for powered aviation but none of these is suitable for gliding, so a new taxonomy was required. A human factors taxonomy specifically for glider operations was developed and used to analyse all UK gliding accidents from 2002 to 2006 for their overall causes as well as factors specific to low hours pilots. Fifty-nine categories of pilot-related accident causation emerged, which were formed into progressively larger categories until four overall human factors groups were arrived at: 'judgement'; 'handling'; 'strategy'; 'attention'. 'Handling' accounted for a significantly higher proportion of injuries than other categories. Inexperienced pilots had considerably more accidents in all categories except 'strategy'. Approach control (path judgement, airbrake and speed handling) as well as landing flare misjudgement were chiefly responsible for the high accident rate in early solo glider pilots.


Language: en

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