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"Shashank Pabrai" writes:
From the hourly amount paid to me, when I subtract the fuel and maintenance costs, it appears like I will be making approx. $ 15 - $20 per hour. Does all of the above sound good / reasonable? Or am I being duped by the flight school? :-) I don't know if you're being duped deliberately, but this is a complex area with razor-thin margins -- I wouldn't try it unless I were very experienced with airplane ownership and with the business of renting airplanes, and I could make good deals with local repair and avionics shops. So how much will you get an hour? Is the FBO covering insurance? In addition to, say, $25/hour for fuel and $8/hour for engine reserve, you have to consider that you have avionics, parts, interior, and paint that will wear out more with each hour flown. For example, this month your vacuum pump might suddenly give up the ghost after 700 hours of use, so you'll have to pay a few hundred to buy a new pump and have it installed; next month, one of your navcom radios will start spilling over onto other frequencies, and after handling the angry phone call from ATC (since the student pilot couldn't figure out the problem and shut down the whole airport for 15 minutes), you'll have to decide between a $500 repair, a replacement used radio, or a new $2000 one. Later the same month, someone will leave a door wide open in heavy winds, and a gust will catch it and bend hingest. After you give up on trying to prove who did it, and recover from the shock of the price of replacement parts from the manufacturer, you're off to the wrecking yards to try to find an OK-condition door (which will inevitably have a dramatically different paint scheme). And so on. I've never done a leaseback, but I get my plane's maintenance done in the same hangar where our club planes are maintained, so I get to see all the stuff they go through. Luckily, the club has its own shop, so the work is not quite as expensive, and they also have a pool of parts and radios pulled off other planes. Still, renting out an airplane is not for the inexperienced or for the faint of heart. All the best, David |
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![]() "David Megginson" wrote in message ... I've never done a leaseback, but I get my plane's maintenance done in the same hangar where our club planes are maintained, so I get to see all the stuff they go through. Luckily, the club has its own shop, so the work is not quite as expensive, and they also have a pool of parts and radios pulled off other planes. Still, renting out an airplane is not for the inexperienced or for the faint of heart. Do you have any figures for the average annual expenses an aircraft owner will incur in a year? Say for a Cessna 152? Hangar, maintenance, etc. Thanks, Dashii |
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