or even if there will be a report. Isnt there some thing in there that says it has to be of a certain severity to even be reported? I know when one of our warriors hit a deer and basicly destroyed a wing and a landing gear strut it was never reported.
I believe one factor is whether it happens in flight. That aircraft is probobly totaled I imagine... the entire airframe looks like it's been overstressed, I wouldn't be surprised if the fuselage is bent. I'd think they'd do a report on that one because it did such a large amount of damage and came so close to being a fatal one.
Remember, an aircraft that only goes up to 25,000 ft, regardless of what cabin altitude it maintains, is NOT considered pressurized at this time by the FAA. Below 25,000 you also don't need quick donning masks. This is why on our 1900s the passenger oxygen masks are "automatically" deployed by us pulling a knob. The crew masks are under covers above our heads and there is a knob to start oxygen flow to them as well (most of our captains leave it pulled as I believe I mentioned earlier). I could see an incident like this causing a change in the way of thinking for oxygen systems. If they determine that the O2 knob was frozen or similiar it could change their way of thinking regarding flow to the masks. The aircraft this happened to was very similiar to what I fly. Imagine if something like this happened on an airliner filled with passengers.
I'll be quite surprised if they don't do a report simply becuase the number of 1900 airliners there are flying around that use similiar or identical systems.