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Can anyone tell me if there is any hangar space available in south
east florida? Dave N415DK |
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On Dec 7, 9:07 pm, CriticalMass wrote:
wrote: Can anyone tell me if there is any hangar space available in south east florida? I'm not in SE Fla, I'm in Tx, but this kind of BS is typical of why I sold my last plane and got out of aviation. Bottom of the food chain access to critical stuff we gotta' have, like hangars, avionics and other maintenance, insurance and fuel prices going outta' sight...TFRs, yada, yada......not worth the hassle. Life as we knew it is gone forever. I know it's frustrating, flying is really becoming a "rich man's hobby", but I am still trying to continue to fly. I just retired and am moving down to south east Florida. I have found two hangars available at $550 and $600 a month. I am in NY and these are high even by NY standards. I am still looking and if anyone can give me a lead I would be grateful. I have a small 1946 Ercoupe and would even consider sharing a hangar with someone. I think $250-300 a month would be considered a reasonable amount. Any comments appreciated. Dave N415DK |
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![]() ... I know it's frustrating, flying is really becoming a "rich man's hobby", but I am still trying to continue to fly. I just retired and am moving down to south east Florida. I have found two hangars available at $550 and $600 a month. I am in NY and these are high even by NY standards. Dave, Where are you hangering in NY? I would jump at $550 per month for a T with electric. That's bottom of the food chain in Greater NY, and you still have to grease the wait list with a few C notes. |
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On Dec 8, 8:53 pm, "Mike Isaksen" wrote:
... I know it's frustrating, flying is really becoming a "rich man's hobby", but I am still trying to continue to fly. I just retired and am moving down to south east Florida. I have found two hangars available at $550 and $600 a month. I am in NY and these are high even by NY standards. Dave, Where are you hangering in NY? I would jump at $550 per month for a T with electric. That's bottom of the food chain in Greater NY, and you still have to grease the wait list with a few C notes. Sullivan County, Monticello, MSV, new T-Hangars are $250 a month.Electric door and all. Of course the closer to NYC the higher the prices. But $550-600 seems high for Florida. Dave |
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![]() Hangar? I've never had a hangar at all. G Outside in New England, home of the 90 minute winter preflight / preheat. Thank God for Bruce's Custom Covers, twice-yearly waxing, and the A/C inverter in my Toyota Tacoma! |
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On Sat, 8 Dec 2007 18:41:43 -0800 (PST), wrote:
But $550-600 seems high for Florida. Even SE Florida? |
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Outside in New England, home of the 90 minute winter preflight /
preheat. God, that brings back (bad) memories. I trained in Wisconsin, in winter, and (of course) my wise old CFI wasn't about to help me pre- flight the plane. While he sat inside drinking hot coffee, I shoveled around the plane, dragged the jet-engine heater up to the cowl, uncoiled the 100 foot of (what seemed like solid wire) extension cord, positioned the ducts accordingly, and cleared the aircraft of ice and snow in sub-zero weather. Wait 20 minutes, and THEN hope the plane actually starts. Did that three mornings a week, before work, all winter. Got my ticket in February. I've been fortunate to have a hangar for our planes since Day One of ownership, nine years ago. Although the hangar's not heated, the plane's engine is, and the oil is a nice, toasty 85 degrees at start- up, no matter the weather outside. Best of all, no busting ice and snow off the wings! Of course, we found our hangar door frozen to the ground last week, which took an hour of effort to break free. So although it's better with a hangar, winter can still be tough. Luckily, cold-weather flying is so much better, it makes it all worth it! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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On Dec 9, 11:29 am, Jay Honeck wrote:
Outside in New England, home of the 90 minute winter preflight / preheat. God, that brings back (bad) memories. I trained in Wisconsin, in winter, and (of course) my wise old CFI wasn't about to help me pre- flight the plane. While he sat inside drinking hot coffee, I shoveled around the plane, dragged the jet-engine heater up to the cowl, uncoiled the 100 foot of (what seemed like solid wire) extension cord, positioned the ducts accordingly, and cleared the aircraft of ice and snow in sub-zero weather. Wait 20 minutes, and THEN hope the plane actually starts. Did that three mornings a week, before work, all winter. Got my ticket in February. I've been fortunate to have a hangar for our planes since Day One of ownership, nine years ago. Although the hangar's not heated, the plane's engine is, and the oil is a nice, toasty 85 degrees at start- up, no matter the weather outside. Best of all, no busting ice and snow off the wings! Of course, we found our hangar door frozen to the ground last week, which took an hour of effort to break free. So although it's better with a hangar, winter can still be tough. Luckily, cold-weather flying is so much better, it makes it all worth it! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" I've also done my share of outside cold weather tie down and flying in New York. The plane I currently own is a 61 year old Ercoupe with fabric wings. I would like to keep it in the restored condition it is in. That's why I am trying to get hangar space. At $7000 a year for hangar space I could just let it rot outside and buy another plane in 5-6 years. Another alternative is to buy the complete set up from Bruces covers, wings, engine, tail and canopy. That might be the solution if I don't find anything. Thanks for all of your input. Dave N415DK 1946 Ercoupe |
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![]() wrote in message ... On Dec 9, 11:29 am, Jay Honeck wrote: Outside in New England, home of the 90 minute winter preflight / preheat. God, that brings back (bad) memories. I trained in Wisconsin, in winter, and (of course) my wise old CFI wasn't about to help me pre- flight the plane. While he sat inside drinking hot coffee, I shoveled around the plane, dragged the jet-engine heater up to the cowl, uncoiled the 100 foot of (what seemed like solid wire) extension cord, positioned the ducts accordingly, and cleared the aircraft of ice and snow in sub-zero weather. Wait 20 minutes, and THEN hope the plane actually starts. Did that three mornings a week, before work, all winter. Got my ticket in February. I've been fortunate to have a hangar for our planes since Day One of ownership, nine years ago. Although the hangar's not heated, the plane's engine is, and the oil is a nice, toasty 85 degrees at start- up, no matter the weather outside. Best of all, no busting ice and snow off the wings! Of course, we found our hangar door frozen to the ground last week, which took an hour of effort to break free. So although it's better with a hangar, winter can still be tough. Luckily, cold-weather flying is so much better, it makes it all worth it! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" I've also done my share of outside cold weather tie down and flying in New York. The plane I currently own is a 61 year old Ercoupe with fabric wings. I would like to keep it in the restored condition it is in. That's why I am trying to get hangar space. At $7000 a year for hangar space I could just let it rot outside and buy another plane in 5-6 years. Another alternative is to buy the complete set up from Bruces covers, wings, engine, tail and canopy. That might be the solution if I don't find anything. Thanks for all of your input. Dave N415DK 1946 Ercoupe I would think you really don't need a hangar in Florida; a simple sun shade car port (plane port?) would be mostly just fine. Seems the hangars blow down in the hurricanes anyway... |
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