General aviation
General aviation | |
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General aircraft at Helsinki-Malmi Airport airport, Finland. |
General aviation (GA) is one of the two categories of civil aviation. It refers to all flights other than military and scheduled airline and regular cargo flights, both private and commercial. General aviation flights range from gliders and powered parachutes to large, non-scheduled cargo jet flights. The majority of the world's air traffic falls into this category, and most of the world's airports serve general aviation exclusively.
General aviation is particularly popular in North America, with over 6,300 airports available for public use by pilots of general aviation aircraft (around 5,200 airports in the U.S., and over 1,000 in Canada[1]). In comparison, scheduled flights operate from around 560 airports in the U.S.[2] According to the U.S. Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, general aviation provides more than one percent of the United States' GDP, accounting for 1.3 million jobs in professional services and manufacturing.[3]
General aviation covers a large range of activities, both commercial and non-commercial, including private flying, flight training, air ambulance, police aircraft, aerial firefighting, air charter, bush flying, gliding, skydiving, and many others. Homebuilt aircraft, light-sport aircraft and very light jets have emerged in recent years as new trends in general aviation.[citation needed]
General aviation involves a wide range of aircraft types such as business jets (bizjets), trainers, homebuilt, aerobatic types, racers, gliders, warbirds, firefighters, medical transports, and cargo transports, to name a few. The vast majority of aircraft today are general aviation types.[citation needed]
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[edit] Types of general aviation
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Within general aviation, there is a further distinction between private aviation (where the pilot is not paid for time or expenses) and commercial aviation (where the pilot is paid by a client or employer). The aircraft used in private aviation are usually light passenger, business, or recreational types, and are usually owned or rented by the pilot. The same types may also be used for a wide range of commercial tasks, such as flight training, pipeline surveying, passenger and freight transport, policing, crop dusting, and medical evacuations. However the larger, more complex aircraft are more likely to be found in the commercial sector. For example, piston-powered propeller aircraft (single-engine or twin-engine) are common for both private and commercial general aviation, but for aircraft such as turboprops like the Beechcraft King Air and helicopters like the Bell JetRanger, there are fewer private owners than commercial owners. Conventional business jets are most often flown by paid pilots, whereas the new generations of smaller jets are being produced for private pilots.
[edit] Regulation and safety
Most countries have authorities that oversee all civil aviation, including general aviation, adhering to the standardized codes of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). Examples include the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in the United States, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) in the United Kingdom, the Luftfahrt-Bundesamt (LBA) in Germany, and Transport Canada in Canada.
Since it includes both non-scheduled commercial operations and private operations, with aircraft of many different types and sizes, and pilots with a variety of different training and experience levels, it is not possible to make blanket statements about the regulation or safety record of general aviation. At one extreme, in most countries business jets and large cargo jets face most of the same regulations as scheduled air transport and fly mostly to the same airports. Commercial bush flying and air ambulance operations normally do not operate under as heavy a regulatory burden, and often only use small airports or off-airport strips, where there is less governmental oversight.[citation needed]
Aviation accident rate statistics are necessarily estimates. According to the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, in 2005 general aviation in the United States (excluding charter) suffered 1.31 fatal accidents for every 100,000 hours of flying in that country, compared to 0.016 for scheduled airline flights.[4] In Canada, recreational flying accounted for 0.7 fatal accidents for every 1000 aircraft, while air taxi accounted for 1.1 fatal accidents for every 100,000 hours.[5]
[edit] See also
Book: Aviation | |
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- General aviation in the United Kingdom
- General aviation in Europe
- Light aircraft
- Aviation and the environment
Associations:
- Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association
- Canadian Owners and Pilots Association
- Experimental Aircraft Association
- National Business Aviation Association
[edit] References
- ^ Nav Canada: Canada Flight Supplement - Canada and North Atlantic Terminal and Enroute Data Nav Canada, 2010.
- ^ FAA Administrator's Fact Book. U.S. Department of Transportation. March 2010. p. 16. http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/aba/admin_factbook/media/201003.pdf.
- ^ AOPA USA's General Aviation website.
- ^ "NTSB accident rates by flying category". Ntsb.gov. http://www.ntsb.gov/aviation/Table1.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-16.
- ^ "Safety Indicators and Targets". Tc.gc.ca. 2008-12-19. http://www.tc.gc.ca/eng/civilaviation/flight2005-578.htm. Retrieved 2010-03-20.
[edit] External links
- International Aircraft Owners and Pilots Associations
- European General Aviation Safety Team (EGAST)
- Colombian General Aviation Association
- "No Plane No Gain" site about business aviation
- Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association
- Experimental Aircraft Association
- Save-GA.org Site concerned with General Aviation in the United States