RyanHealy29 said:
But if an engine failure happens in a single engine aircraft during flight, the chances of that entire aircraft being lost are much higher than if an engine failure happens in an aircraft with a second engine capable of keeping it in the air. So you can say that in the case of an inflight engine problem, a dual engine set up is more survivable than a single engine set up.
That is not the only factor.
Modern engines are far more reliable than older ones. The single engine on F35 is statistically far more reliable than the two on our F18s. So which, really, is "more survivable"? If the odds of an engine failure on any given flight are, say, 0.00000000001%, is an improvement to 0.000000000005% worth the extra space, weight, and expense?
The same arguments were raised when airliners went from four to three to two engines.
We have previously operated many single-engined aircraft (jet and piston) over the same vast expanses of wilderness that now, apparently, requires a minimum of two engines.
The US Navy flies over vast expanses of water, and does not seem to think that a second engine is necessary any more.
As I posted elsewhere on this site: "I've got over 4000 hours on single-engined helicopters by day and night, fair weather or foul, over large expanses of wilderness, water, alligator-infested swamp, major cities, and Liberal-held ridings, and not once, ever, did I see that as a problem."
I've never had as much as a hiccup from an engine. I never, ever got stuck anywhere (even when I wanted to be stuck) due to an engine problem (or any other), until I was flying a twin-engined helicopter. I'm sure that there were worse gravel pits to leave one's machine overnight, and there were perhaps worse hotels (but I cannot actually recall ever being in one).
We have lost at least one "safer" F18 due to a single-engine failure.
The USN had both engines on an F18 fail with a resultant crash into a residential neighbourhood in California several years ago.
If one flies through enough geese, even four will not necessarily keep one alive - the USAF lost an AWACS due to multiple goose-strikes a few years ago.
And engines are not the only things that can go catastrophically wrong.