It would be fascinating to see a breakdown of the flown hours by aircraft type though - and I can't help wondering if gyro pilots fly a lot more often than the NTCA average?
Some other interesting gyro stats emerging from the RAASA reports:
In the past 2 years there was a 45% increase in the issuing of gyro ratings.

Last year the issue of gyro ratings issued slowed to just 13% and the issue of gyro ATF's declined by -11% (compared to the 33% gyro ATF growth during 2010)

The economic situation is obviously negatively impacting gyro training schools, agents and owners alike.

And from a safety perspective:
With RAASA now collecting hours flown by pilot license / category data, it will finally be possible to get an indication of comparative actual number flying hours versus number of accidents across the different categories e.g Gyro / CCM / WCM / LSA.
I've always held the view that to try and make assumptions about accident occurrence numbers is absolutely meaningless unless the number of accidents per X flying hours can be determined - and RAASA's data can now help shed some light into this.
Having a background in strategic planning I get off on this sort of analytics so if anyone has a contact at RAASA who would be willing to share the data I think it could make for some very insightful analysis?
