Abingdonboy
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Okay.. so, with a crash rate of 0.22 aircraft per 10,000 flying hours ... 1 aircraft crash per 45,000 flying hours.
One fighter pilot does 250 hours per year .. let's say he flies for 20 years .. so 5000 hours in the lifetime.
So, 9 pilots fly 45,000 hours during their lifetimes .... and one of them will face a crash, once during his lifetime.
1 out of every 9 pilots will face an aircrash. Thank goodness, that doesn't mean 1 in every 9 pilots ends his life in that one crash. Thanks to ejection.
Next question: What is the reliability of successful ejections, per attempt.
>> If 50% of the ejections succeed in saving the pilot .... 1 in every 18 pilots will lose his life in a crash.
>> If 75% of the ejections succeed in saving the pilot .... 1 in every 36 pilots will lose his life in a crash.
>> If 90% of the ejections succeed in saving the pilot .... 1 in every 90 pilots will lose his life in a crash.
Last one means .. about 1.11% fatality rate for someone who chooses his profession to be a fighter pilot.
I don't know, but is IAFs successful ejection rate = 90%. It so, then it sounds quite reasonable for someone to choose his profession as a fighter pilot.
On the other hand, if IAFs successful ejection rate =0%, there is a nearly 11% chance that anyone who chooses to be a fighter pilot will die in a crash .. (.. that would be rather too risky, IMO).
Hence, my interest in what is the successful ejection rate for IAF !!!!
Again such info is not publicly available and given there plethora of different fighters and trainers in IAF service many with different ejection seats it makes sense not to generalise. As one could say a pilot who ends up flying a Mig-21/7 is x times more likely to die in a plane crash than a pilot who flies a MKI or Rafale. Additionally there are more variables to take into account than just successful ejection rate ie the cause behind every single crash and then the cause behind every single fatality of a pilot. As you are assuming that every fatality of a pilot is caused by a failure of the air craft's ejection system when there are other factors to consider ie I can think of many of occasions when a pilot has ejected too late because they were steering their stricken machine into clear ground so as not to cause Civilain casualties on the ground.
It is going to be a very complex and near impossible calculation to get a pilot fatality rate or anything like that.