📄 Extracted Text (302 words)
To: [email protected][[email protected]]; jeffrey epsteinlieevacation©gmaitcomj
From:
Sent: Fri 3/9/2012 8:29:03 AM
Subject: Re: flight hours
yes, I read the book twice. Rates are per /mil flights for each airline. I can't figure out why the number of
planes or pilots per airline is relevant? I'm not arguing, I just think its interesting so want to figure it out..
From: jeffre e stein <eevacation mail.com>
To: SW
Sent: Friday, March 9, 2012 2:31 AM
Subject: Re: flight hours
Again , faulty statistics . Read up on causality . You did not include nbers hired . If more than
thousand hour airlines had more planes. Etc I have no info but you have not presented any that
arc accurate or meaningful . Random facts. Coincidence . - read fooled by randomness . Taleb
Sorry for all the typos .Sent from my iPhonc
On Mar 9, 2012, at 3:18 AMMI MI - wrote:
There is no data about number of flight hours of each pilot involved in an
accident/incident, but I looked up co-pilot hiring minimums for each of these airlines and
compared it to their safety record over 5 years. It's interesting...
Co-pilot hiring minimums:
6 airlines require <1000 hours - ALL have max 3 accidents/ incidents & no fatalities per 1 000
000 takeoffs
20 airlines require >1000 hours - 11 have 4+ accidents, deadly accidents or 4+ incidents per 1
000 000 takeoffs
BEST:
Airlines with 0 accidents and 0-1 incident per 1 000 000 takeoffs:
Expressjet
Cape Air
Sun Country
Air Transport International
2 have co-pilot hiring minimums under 1000 hours)
WORST:
Airlines with 5+ accidents or deadly accident or 7+ incidents per 1 000 000 takeoffs:
Alaska Airlines
Continental
Comair
Delta
Frontier
Trans State Airlines
United
US airways
EFTA_R1_00489202
EFTA01995012
ALL have co-pilot hiring minimums over 1000 hours!
<hours.png>
EFTA_R1_00489203
EFTA01995013
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