phislett wrote:i understand about pilot error

i was just also wondering if the actual wings could fail
My biggest concern with anything that I fly is structural failure. The way I see it, there are two boxes of parameters under my control. The first is my personal limitation and that will vary depending on my currency on the aircraft to be flown as well as overall experience. The second is the parameters in which the aircraft being flown can perform. (For example, I will roll an RV4 or RV7, but NOT a Jabiru J170)
Now having taken these two boxes of parameters into account and adjusted for weather conditions, etc.... I feel that I can pretty much manage the "risk element" pertaining to flying - what I can't control is if the is a catastrophic failure beyond my control - failures like wing collapse, engine mount collapse, partial prop being sheared, etc...etc.... It is this aspect of flying that has concerned me and we have noted a number of structural failure related accidents in the World, ranging from microlights to airliners.... no machine is exempt.
In my case, I was fortunate enough to survive a structural failure on a microlight aquilla wing - my remedy was to have all the bolts replaced by aircraft AN grade bolts to better manage my risk of a repeat.
The best advice I could give, is to spend the pre-flight time wisely and only fly aircraft that have not been flown recklessly by others (In the case of syndicated, school or club planes)
The bottom line and to answer the starter question of this discussion: "Can microlights wings fail??" - Of course they can, although it is probably rare, but they can !!!