The following Safety Recommendation issued by the NTSB following a Model B117 Eurocopter crash investigation may interest you:
The whole thing is only seven pages long and worth reading, but for the less patient, the part concerning blind rivet substitution (CR3243-4 CherryMax
in this particular case) for solid rivets picks up near the bottom of page 4 at "Manufacturer and Federal Aviation Administration Instruction for Rivet Use". Note that these particular shear-ring, "bulb" type blind rivets fall into the 90% Wil talks about above; they do not provide the degree "hole-fill" or installed “interference” afforded by the NAS1388 (example:
or NAS 1399 "wiredraw" type blind rivets Wil mentions. It is also worth noting that many manufacturer’s don’t recommend mixing “solid” and “blind” rivets in a “pattern.” The differences in hole-filling characteristics and relative fastener stiffness/compliance can result in uneven fastener loading, providing higher loading on a relatively fewer fasteners, and therefore a greater potential for failure.
Among the statements in the report:
"Postaccident testing conducted by Textron Aerospace Fasteners (TAF) and earlier testing conducted by Eurocopter consistently demonstrated that the joint fatigue life of materials fastened with blind rivets is less than the joint fatigue life of the same materials fastened with solid rivets.
The Safety Board is concerned that other maintenance personnel may install blind rivets in applications where solid rivets are required, thereby reducing the structural fatigue life of an airframe. Therefore, the Safety Board believes that the FAA should issue a maintenance alert to
all certificated airframe mechanics and inspectors to notify them of the circumstances of this accident and to inform them of the hazards associated with the installation of blind rivets."
For those interested, the additional related FAA Advisory Circulars (ACs) and Airworthiness Directives (ADs) referenced in the NTSB can generally be found on the FAAs website.
To quote Wil: "Folks... Be VERY careful when working with rivets" ... "Each type of fastener REQUIRES very serious consideration and should be designed into the product from the start." Good advice indeed.