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#1
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These are not YOUR airplanes - Was: High Cost of Sportplanes
Start with this: How many people do you know who own a $45,000 SUV?
Light Sport Aircraft are not intended for people who are already pilots. The whole purpose of the Light Sport Certificate is to draw new people, along with new money, into the sport side of aviation. Consider someone who has never flown before. He's run through golf, and tennis, and skiing. He has a nice house, with a home theater and possibly a pool. He has reached the point where there are almost no "toys" left for him to spend his money on. Ask this guy if $80,000 dollars is too much to pay for an airplane, and he will consider the $45,000 he paid for his SUV, and quite probably say that it IS NOT too much money. Just as a side note: I'm unable to get a medical, so Sport Pilot is the only way for me to go. I don't have $80,000, so I'm planning to build an eLSA. So I have been doing a lot of research on LSA's. And one thing I have learned is that most of the people in the aviation business are really lousy at marketing their products to anyone other than other people in aviation. When was the last time you saw a Tecnam or Cub Crafters or Legend Cub ad in the Wall Street Journal, or Time magazine, or your local newspaper? Just as is happening with this thread, far too many people with a stake in LSA have simply been preaching to the choir. But the choir has been there, done that, and isn't going to pay $80K for a "toy" airplane. There's one other factor at work with "conventional" aircraft, that is also in play to some extent with LSA's. Consider a non-flyer who gets out of his car and climbs into a Warrior or a 172. In his car, he's got GPS, he's got satellite radio, he's got digital everything. But when he climbs into a light Piper or Cessna, he's got his grandfather's Buick. Why would he want to fly around in something that clunky looking? LSA has one big advantage: it can be very nimble. Most of the smarter LSA manufacturers are offering goodies like the Dynon EFIS ($2,500 +/-) or a panel-mounted Garmin GPS 296 ($3,000 +/-). No more row after row of incomprehensible steam gauges, now they have a cockpit with a sports car feel. It is quite possible to go out and SELL 10,000 $80,000 airplanes to people who have never set foot in anything smaller than a 737. But the operative word is SELL. Five years from now, you'll have may 1,000 - 1,500 of those people still flying; all of the rest will have moved on to the next new and hot hobby. Which means you'll have 8,500 - 9,000 $80,000 airplanes that can be bought for less than $40,000. And they'll be far better equipped than the airplanes now rolling out of the doors at Cessna or Piper. So, the $80,000 airplane model can work, if the manufacturers learn how to market them properly, to people who are not yet pilots. And Sport Pilot can work to all of our benefit, because if enough new people come into GA, it will thrive. But with no new pilots coming in... |
#2
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Bill,
First of all, the issue is whether these sportplanes are overpriced and delivering poor value for the buck, not whether there are some people who will actually pay the artificially high price, regardless. I agree that the idea is to attract a wider audience to recreational flying, but $80,000 is too much money for a toy, for most individuals. If you talk to people on the marketing side of recreational products they will tell you that $50,000 is a very real psychological barrier. That's why you the vast majority of boats and other recreational vehicles priced below this point. As you go over that threshold it becomes a niche market for hardcore enthusiasts or the very affluent. Also, I don't believe it is a marketing problem. It is a value problem. These planes just aren't worth what the manufacturers are asking for them. No amount of marketing is going to overcome a porr value proposition. Advertising is not going to change that. It will just add more cost to the product. Do you know how much it costs to run an ad in a mainstream media publication? It is a lot more than in the enthusiast magazines -- and is out of reach for these small, bootstrap companies. Advertizing in the WSJ or Time is bizjet territory, not LSA. What might work is advertising in enthusiast magazines other than aviation, such as boating, skiing, motorcycling, etc. Here you already have the "toy" demographic who are likely to consider something new. But the best marketing approach is going to be to provide a good product at a realistic price. At $80,000 (Really closer to $100,000 if equipped with a few of those options you suggested), there are very few individuals who will buy them. Right now the only ones I can think of are those who can't get a medical, are desperate to fly and don't care about the value they are getting for their dollar. I agree with some of the comments that have been made that the first entrants are pricing high and aiming for just the desperate medical-less demographic. That market will soon be saturated and then who are they going to sell these $100,000 toys to? In a few years, I expect prices to be considerably lower as smart entreprenurs get into this business and begin offering planes that are better value. I also expect that the resale value of the planes that are selling now to do a graveyard spiral. In Canada, we've had what the advanced ultralight category for a number of years, which is very similar to your Sport Pilot, and have had the Tecnams and a lot of these other European planes for some time. Try to sell a used one and see how much you get. As soon as you fly it off the dealer's field it will have dropped at least a third of its value. Regards, Gordon. "Lakeview Bill" wrote in message ... Start with this: How many people do you know who own a $45,000 SUV? Light Sport Aircraft are not intended for people who are already pilots. The whole purpose of the Light Sport Certificate is to draw new people, along with new money, into the sport side of aviation. Consider someone who has never flown before. He's run through golf, and tennis, and skiing. He has a nice house, with a home theater and possibly a pool. He has reached the point where there are almost no "toys" left for him to spend his money on. Ask this guy if $80,000 dollars is too much to pay for an airplane, and he will consider the $45,000 he paid for his SUV, and quite probably say that it IS NOT too much money. Just as a side note: I'm unable to get a medical, so Sport Pilot is the only way for me to go. I don't have $80,000, so I'm planning to build an eLSA. So I have been doing a lot of research on LSA's. And one thing I have learned is that most of the people in the aviation business are really lousy at marketing their products to anyone other than other people in aviation. When was the last time you saw a Tecnam or Cub Crafters or Legend Cub ad in the Wall Street Journal, or Time magazine, or your local newspaper? Just as is happening with this thread, far too many people with a stake in LSA have simply been preaching to the choir. But the choir has been there, done that, and isn't going to pay $80K for a "toy" airplane. There's one other factor at work with "conventional" aircraft, that is also in play to some extent with LSA's. Consider a non-flyer who gets out of his car and climbs into a Warrior or a 172. In his car, he's got GPS, he's got satellite radio, he's got digital everything. But when he climbs into a light Piper or Cessna, he's got his grandfather's Buick. Why would he want to fly around in something that clunky looking? LSA has one big advantage: it can be very nimble. Most of the smarter LSA manufacturers are offering goodies like the Dynon EFIS ($2,500 +/-) or a panel-mounted Garmin GPS 296 ($3,000 +/-). No more row after row of incomprehensible steam gauges, now they have a cockpit with a sports car feel. It is quite possible to go out and SELL 10,000 $80,000 airplanes to people who have never set foot in anything smaller than a 737. But the operative word is SELL. Five years from now, you'll have may 1,000 - 1,500 of those people still flying; all of the rest will have moved on to the next new and hot hobby. Which means you'll have 8,500 - 9,000 $80,000 airplanes that can be bought for less than $40,000. And they'll be far better equipped than the airplanes now rolling out of the doors at Cessna or Piper. So, the $80,000 airplane model can work, if the manufacturers learn how to market them properly, to people who are not yet pilots. And Sport Pilot can work to all of our benefit, because if enough new people come into GA, it will thrive. But with no new pilots coming in... |
#3
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Gordon,
Based on my back of the envelope analysis of the theoretical base price of a 2 place aircraft, I think wishing for a plane costing less than 50K is nothing more than a pipe dream. If you use the following numbers as a guide, you'll see what I mean. Airframe + instruments + basic engine + labor = theoretical base price 20000 + 4000 + 15000 + ( 500 * 45 ) = 61500 Notice that this price doesn't include any profit, overhead costs or insurance. Add those in, & you quickly get to a point where $80K looks reasonable & $100K understandable. As I've mentioned before, until the structural issues affecting cost (labor & machined materials) are addressed with better up-front engineering, these costs won't come down. Evan |
#4
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Evan,
I understand the point you are trying to make and your numbers are not unreasonable. However, just for the same of argument, what if the airframe parts, ready to be assembled could be punched out for under $10,000? This is not unreasonable considering that Van's can sell a kit for $15,000 and still make a profit. And what if the engine could be supplied for under $10,000 too? This too is not unreasonable, considering you could buy a brand new PZL four-banger for that much money for a number of years. So now your total figure has dropped by $15,000 to $46,000. True this does not leave a lot of profit margin, but you are getting very close to the $50,000 factory-built airplane. Regards, Gordon. "Evan Carew" wrote in message ... Gordon, Based on my back of the envelope analysis of the theoretical base price of a 2 place aircraft, I think wishing for a plane costing less than 50K is nothing more than a pipe dream. If you use the following numbers as a guide, you'll see what I mean. Airframe + instruments + basic engine + labor = theoretical base price 20000 + 4000 + 15000 + ( 500 * 45 ) = 61500 Notice that this price doesn't include any profit, overhead costs or insurance. Add those in, & you quickly get to a point where $80K looks reasonable & $100K understandable. As I've mentioned before, until the structural issues affecting cost (labor & machined materials) are addressed with better up-front engineering, these costs won't come down. Evan |
#5
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On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 23:19:54 GMT, "Lakeview Bill"
wrote: Start with this: How many people do you know who own a $45,000 SUV? Light Sport Aircraft are not intended for people who are already pilots. The whole purpose of the Light Sport Certificate is to draw new people, along with new money, into the sport side of aviation. Maybe, but the bright businessman would understand that existing pilots are a far more readily available source of funds until the sportpilots start rolling in. I live in charlotte, #25 in city size and North Carolina was the birth of powered flight. I don't know of ANYONE who is offering sportpilot. And the planes are selling now. Ergo, who are they selling to? In reality, I see SP as a bust until someone gets the price down. The potential market isn't that blame rich. They are upper-middle class. 80K is a lot of scratch. 40-50K is an extra SUV. Jim http://www.unconventional-wisdom.org |
#6
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I agree.
There is probably a very big market of existing pilots who are not airplane owners. I think there are over half a million pilots in the US, but only about half of them own their own airplane. I bet that almost every one of those airplane-less pilots would love to become an owner if it wasn't such a poor value proposition. Notice I'm not saying "if they could afford it." There are a lot of people who could afford to own an airplane but refuse to because it is such poor value that it offends their sensibilities. So they rent instead, or don't even bother flying anymore. I think sportplanes are just the thing for a lot of these people -- a nice little Sunday flyer that is also capable of modest cross-country travel. Cheap to buy and economical to own. Well that was the dream anyway. But with people trying to sell you a $50,000 sportplane for $100,000, you get that same old sinking feeling again and say "why bother?" Regards, Gordon. "Jimbob" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 23:19:54 GMT, "Lakeview Bill" wrote: Start with this: How many people do you know who own a $45,000 SUV? Light Sport Aircraft are not intended for people who are already pilots. The whole purpose of the Light Sport Certificate is to draw new people, along with new money, into the sport side of aviation. Maybe, but the bright businessman would understand that existing pilots are a far more readily available source of funds until the sportpilots start rolling in. I live in charlotte, #25 in city size and North Carolina was the birth of powered flight. I don't know of ANYONE who is offering sportpilot. And the planes are selling now. Ergo, who are they selling to? In reality, I see SP as a bust until someone gets the price down. The potential market isn't that blame rich. They are upper-middle class. 80K is a lot of scratch. 40-50K is an extra SUV. Jim http://www.unconventional-wisdom.org |
#7
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Gordon Arnaut wrote:
I agree. There is probably a very big market of existing pilots who are not airplane owners. I think there are over half a million pilots in the US, but only about half of them own their own airplane. I bet that almost every one of those airplane-less pilots would love to become an owner if it wasn't such a poor value proposition. Notice I'm not saying "if they could afford it." There are a lot of people who could afford to own an airplane but refuse to because it is such poor value that it offends their sensibilities. So they rent instead, or don't even bother flying anymore. I think sportplanes are just the thing for a lot of these people -- a nice little Sunday flyer that is also capable of modest cross-country travel. Cheap to buy and economical to own. Well that was the dream anyway. But with people trying to sell you a $50,000 sportplane for $100,000, you get that same old sinking feeling again and say "why bother?" Regards, Gordon. To my knowledge, when I got my current plane and took my BFR, I was the only functional Sport Pilot in our area (central TX). There may be others by now, but that was back in June, I believe and the rule had been in force since the previous sept. I agree that the bang/buck ratio is the primary difficulty with E/SLSA. Indeed, those manufacturers have a pretty formidable task on their plates - convincing all these pilots to pay 80 grand for $30-40K airplanes and creating an entire industry off doing so. That's a "tough room" for anyone..... Now, going back to the local SP statistics again, I know of zero SLSA that have been bought in the local area. I've not yet seen an ELSA either, and in fact have not even seen a "gELSA" (an uncertificated light plane that doesn't meet part 103 that has been granted an AC under the 'grandfathering' provision good thru 2008). The lion's share are either already certificated light a/c that fit within the SP LSA limitations (champs, and so on) or Exp A/B airplanes that also fit in thos limitations (like my airplane). Well, so far my actual statistic is only one, me, but among the other prospective SP's that I know, the intention is to go the same route. None has any intention of buying an SLSA. So what it really looks like to me is, as a manufacturer, SLSA makes right at 0.00 sense at the current time. You can do a LOT better by simply continuing to make your current kits intended for Exp A/B and selling those to prospective Sport Pilots. Retooling cost == 0.00.... That is apparently exactly what most manufacturers are doing. Those that don't have kits that meet the SP LSA limitations, such as Vans, seem to be toying with the idea of kits only, with ELSA or SLSA far down on the list of priorities. The only cases I can think of where an SLSA would make any sense at all would be rental and training. I think a catch-22 in such a thing has already been noticed by someone in this thread and wrote about it.... And even there, the alternatives still seem to be better, so this isn't going very well either. So I think the task at this point to get something like SLSA to be viable is an onerous one, particularly because only a little research is needed to really discover how much airplane 80 grand can really buy you. For sure, if someone put a gun to my head and made me spend 80 grand of my estate on a flying machine, it dame sure isn't going to be no light sport aircraft. Medical or no, it's going to be an RV 8 or better.... or 3,4 copies of my plane, or... you get the idea.... As I always say, Caveat Emptor..... LS N646F "Jimbob" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 23:19:54 GMT, "Lakeview Bill" wrote: Start with this: How many people do you know who own a $45,000 SUV? Light Sport Aircraft are not intended for people who are already pilots. The whole purpose of the Light Sport Certificate is to draw new people, along with new money, into the sport side of aviation. Maybe, but the bright businessman would understand that existing pilots are a far more readily available source of funds until the sportpilots start rolling in. I live in charlotte, #25 in city size and North Carolina was the birth of powered flight. I don't know of ANYONE who is offering sportpilot. And the planes are selling now. Ergo, who are they selling to? In reality, I see SP as a bust until someone gets the price down. The potential market isn't that blame rich. They are upper-middle class. 80K is a lot of scratch. 40-50K is an extra SUV. Jim http://www.unconventional-wisdom.org |
#8
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Gordon,
This is exactly how the problem space needs to be framed. The economic solution to this problem is to rely on donations of high value engineering skills to jump start the production of aircraft parts with an eye to minimizing input labor costs. I own a company here in South-east Michigan that makes filter parts for oddball filtration systems. Since these parts are all custom, we paid a local CAD firm to do the designs, then passed those off to a machine shop that does work for GM. Its amazing how cheaply you can make parts if you do the up-front engineering on them first. IT also helps that we have underutilized quality machine shop capacity here surronding the auto companies. Should someone in the EAA, familliar with engines, whish to design a new engine (like the Jibaru) from scratch. This would be a good place to do it. I say from scratch because the Lycoming/Contenental combo aren't what I would call engineered for efficient manufacturing. Perhaps something like a cross between the Rotax & the Jibaru would work. As for the airframe parts, unless someone comes up with a process to dramatically reduce the labor in making a fiberglass fuse, I don't think we will be seing cheap airframe parts any time soon. On the other hand, if you don't mind assembling yourself, the aluminum option could work with CNCd parts. No, until someone comes up with a way to pull a fully primed and painted fiberglass part from a mold (no trimming/sanding required), we aren't going to see cheap airframe parts, however, maybe that's not as critical as it would seem. Looking at my numbers, a well engineered airframe for 20K still might not break the bank if you could get its assembly/surfas prep/painting labor costs way down. You'd literally have to engineer the entire process. So lets see... Time Process descrip cost at $45/hr 20 Airframe assembly $900 5 powerplant install $225 10 airframe surface prep $450 10 airframe painting $450 5 instruments $225 5 interior $225 5 testing $225 ---------------------------------------- 60 $2700 Now that's getting the price of the airplane down! Combine that with an engine for ~10K or even a little less & you have something: Airframe + instruments + basic engine + labor = theoretical base price 20000 + 4000 + 9000 + ( 60 * 45 ) = 35700 |
#9
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Evan,
I think your analysis is realistic -- and forethought in process engineering is critical. In fact, I think a lot of the European manufacturers already have a lot of these efficiencies in place. Europe and other parts of the world -- including Canada -- have already had special rules for light sport-type aircraft for a number of years and many of these airplane makers have been making these light planes for years. That's why they were srping-loaded to crank out these planes for the US market. However, there are a couple of factors here that work against a low price, chief among them being the strong Euro relative to the US greenback. The Rotax engine is expensive too and combine it with the fairly expensive and labor-intensive composite manufacturing process you have prices that are not as good as they could be. Also the European JAR certification is not as simple as LSA certification -- it more like "real" certification, but not as rigorous. So these outfits did have some real certification costs that are built into the planes. However, having said all that I still believe that there is an element of opportunism in their pricing -- which is only shooting themselves in the foot, by overpricing this market before it has even had a chance to flower. Don't forget that there is also an additional layer here for the US importer, so there is another middleman taking his cut. This is why you are seeing the $80,000 sportplane (more like $100,000 with decent panel options). In reality these planes already could be $50,000 planes if they were made here in North America -- Canada is a great manufacturing base, as Diamond Aircraft, Symphony and others will confirm. And if you had a good $10,000 engine you could make a nice profit with those $50,000 sportplanes. I really belive that aluminum is the way to go, however. Again, look at the Van's kit. Suppose you wanted to set up a factory to produce sportplanes. Your business plan would include a CNC facility for machining the metal pieces and you could stamp out parts with very high efficiency. The cost of aluminum is quite modest. I doubt there can more than about $1500 worth of aircraft aluminum in a 1,300 pound gross weight sportplane. With the right process in place and the tooling to crank out parts pre-finished to a reasonably high degree, the assembly time can be brought down to quite an efficient level. I think people like Van's and Murphy Aircraft in Canada, both of whom have facotries with lots of CNC and other sophisticated tooling already in place, are going to be thinking seriously about putting together finished all-aluminum sportplanes. (Their kitplanes are already aluminum-based.) I think in Europe composites have taken hold because of the vibrant sailplane industry that has existed there for decades and where composites have replaced wood construction for quite some time. I think the better ones are pretty efficieent at it by now. And once they see a North American company selling $50,000 sportplanes like hotcakes, you will see them suddenly jumping in with competitive pricing as well. And if none of that happens, the kit industry will keep on thriving. A kit from Van's or Murphy is a good value proposition. (For the really parsimonious, plans building is even more of a value propostion, as long as you don't count the TV-couch time that you are sacrificing to your airplane project). I think someone mentioned that there are about 20,000 amateur-built airplanes on the registry rolls now, but an even more impressive statistic I have heard is that there are actually more homebuilts certified each year than factory-built GA airplanes. If people vote with their wallets, which happens to be a good truism, this is a good indicator of what people think about the "value" of factory-built airplanes -- which is to say not much. Regards, Gordon. "Evan Carew" wrote in message ... Gordon, This is exactly how the problem space needs to be framed. The economic solution to this problem is to rely on donations of high value engineering skills to jump start the production of aircraft parts with an eye to minimizing input labor costs. I own a company here in South-east Michigan that makes filter parts for oddball filtration systems. Since these parts are all custom, we paid a local CAD firm to do the designs, then passed those off to a machine shop that does work for GM. Its amazing how cheaply you can make parts if you do the up-front engineering on them first. IT also helps that we have underutilized quality machine shop capacity here surronding the auto companies. Should someone in the EAA, familliar with engines, whish to design a new engine (like the Jibaru) from scratch. This would be a good place to do it. I say from scratch because the Lycoming/Contenental combo aren't what I would call engineered for efficient manufacturing. Perhaps something like a cross between the Rotax & the Jibaru would work. As for the airframe parts, unless someone comes up with a process to dramatically reduce the labor in making a fiberglass fuse, I don't think we will be seing cheap airframe parts any time soon. On the other hand, if you don't mind assembling yourself, the aluminum option could work with CNCd parts. No, until someone comes up with a way to pull a fully primed and painted fiberglass part from a mold (no trimming/sanding required), we aren't going to see cheap airframe parts, however, maybe that's not as critical as it would seem. Looking at my numbers, a well engineered airframe for 20K still might not break the bank if you could get its assembly/surfas prep/painting labor costs way down. You'd literally have to engineer the entire process. So lets see... Time Process descrip cost at $45/hr 20 Airframe assembly $900 5 powerplant install $225 10 airframe surface prep $450 10 airframe painting $450 5 instruments $225 5 interior $225 5 testing $225 ---------------------------------------- 60 $2700 Now that's getting the price of the airplane down! Combine that with an engine for ~10K or even a little less & you have something: Airframe + instruments + basic engine + labor = theoretical base price 20000 + 4000 + 9000 + ( 60 * 45 ) = 35700 |
#10
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Gordon,
Unfortunately, I have to disagree with you on your analysis of aluminum use in commercially built LSA aircraft structures. While it is true that the aluminum materials costs for an aircraft are lower, the labor costs (which I have already shown to be the largest cost in building any plane) are much higher, thus making it a poor choice if you are trying to build such airplanes for a profit. On the other hand, if you are trying to sell kit LSA airframes, then the builder assumes the labor costs, thus making a comparable kit seem less expensive. |
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