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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... |
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