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#31
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making it work depends on what you want to work.
If you just want it to pay the bills then its a good thing, if your trying to make money, probably will not do it. as for the same as renting, thats depends on the FBO, I never scheduled my plane, if no one had it, I took it. Newps wrote: "The Weiss Family" wrote in message ... "Jeff" wrote in message ... and if you do not want any costs, lease it back to a flight school, chances are it will rent enough that it covers all your costs. If you do a lease-back, what type of insurance must you carry? Forget it. You will never make a leaseback work. Plus it is the same as renting a plane. You now have to schedule your own damn plane. You would need commercial insurance. It is at least three times regular insurance. |
#32
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makes no sense to you, makes sense to me since I am the one payig the bills
for it. I would buy a plane with a factory reman before I bought one with a who knows what kind of overhaul. Newps wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message ... when I bought my current plane, I went after a low time factory reman. engine. Which makes no sense as it has a Continental. The last thing I want is Continental jugs. Chromed Continental cylinders would be OK. |
#33
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There is a big difference between owning and renting. Let me explain.
When you own a plane, you know exactly where it has been, who has been flying it and working on it, when the oil was changed last, what that funny smell is. You know no one other than you (or your partners if you have them) has landed the plane hard and tried to hide it, or buzzed an irate neighbor, etc. Peace of mind. If you rent long enough you will see some crazy crap that people pull. To pay for this peace of mind, you have to come up cash for all of the regular bills: fuel and oil, maintenance, hangar, insurance. This list can be as fancy or tame as you want, but for a trainer it breaks down pretty easily. I'll mock one up so you can see: insurance: $800/yr tie-down: $480/yr (40/mo) loan pmts: $3600/yr (300/mo) annual: $1000/yr flying: $2000/yr (2.50/gal, 8gph, 100hrs) misc: $1000/yr (oil, light bulbs, unplanned) -------- $8880/yr = $740/mo Sure you can make it cheaper. Do a lot of your own maintenance, get a plane with an auto gas STC, all kinds of things. Get a homebuilt, you might cut that value in half, many owners have. Now, to answer your question about a break-even point, if you are paying $75/hr to rent that trainer then that 100 hrs costs you $7500, no variation. You might find a cheaper rental, but other than that you have no options in making it cheaper. Now, here we get to the real difference. "Breaking even" happens somewhere around 125 hours in this model, but doing this kind of math is entirely misleading. There are many, many variables in ownership that simply don't exist when renting. More to the point, there are responsibilities that don't exist for renters. When it breaks YOU pay for it. Sometimes it breaks in a very big way. Our plane broke in a very big way just after we bought it. Nosegear collapsed on the 8th landing we made. Got the engine apart---yep, it needs a complete overhaul, because prepurchase inspections do not have x-ray vision. Even after the insurance settlement we paid over 1/3 again for the plane, not counting the $2500 to get my family home from the middle of nowhere on a commercial airline. This is not to scare you. We rebuilt our plane and it ROCKS. I could never go back to renting even if I had one next door. However, you have to know what responsibilities you are taking on, and how you are going to answer them if they call. We are lucky, we have some home equity we could spend on the plane. If I hadn't had that, what kind of repairs would I have been able to afford? Would I have put my family back into it with cheaper repairs? In this way it is no different from an RV or a nice boat---the costs are similar. But your family is not necessarily in danger if you go cheap on fixing your RV. Anyway, I hope this gives you some things to think about. Use your imagination and try to think of bad things that could happen, and how much they could cost, and how you will afford them if they do. Think of this as a graduation in responsibility and you will be better prepared to accept the benefits. hope this helps Elwood The Weiss Family wrote: I would love to know your real-world costs of ownership for your fixed gear |
#34
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By the way, the plane we bought had a low to mid time engine, 700hrs on
a 2000hr TBO, Lycoming IO-360. It still needed an overhaul, and not just because of the damage done by the prop strike. The term "buyer beware" has incredible significance in this market. Keeping an airplane in good shape is expensive, and not everyone does more than they absolutely have to. Don't buy the cheapest plane you find, don't believe ANYTHING the seller/broker/whoever says without written proof, and don't go it alone---find a knowledgeable friend who has been there to walk through it with you. You need someone on your side. If you don't have a friend like this, go make one! Lastly, don't believe anything you read on the Internet. Read Ron Wanttaja's book about airplane ownership, it will put you on the right road. Elwood |
#35
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The Weiss Family wrote:
and if you do not want any costs, lease it back to a flight school, chances are it will rent enough that it covers all your costs. If you do a lease-back, what type of insurance must you carry? Just a quick warning -- I think I've read one, maybe two postings from people who had good or neutral experiences with lease-backs. All of the others have described it as a trip to hell and back. If you have to book the plane whenever you want to use it, and might find that it's already booked by someone else, where are the benefits of owning? All the best, David |
#36
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David Megginson writes:
Bob Fry wrote: From my experience the market isn't working w.r.t. discounting the price of an airplane with the engine near TBO. When searching for my airplane, I found two very similar models to the one I eventually bought, and rejected them both when the owners wouldn't discount their selling price because of the engine time. Presumably, they'd already built the engine time into their selling prices. Unfortunately, a lot of owners seem to have pretty exaggerated ideas of what their planes are worth. They probably had to drop their prices eventually, or else they gave up on trying to sell. Neither one had taken into account the cost of an engine overhaul, IMO. Both did eventually sell; one for about $4000-$5000 less than what I paid for my similar, low-time model. So some discounting (for high-time engine) was done by seller and buyer, but not enough. |
#37
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On Sun, 23 May 2004 16:16:12 -0700, "The Weiss Family"
wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message ... and if you do not want any costs, lease it back to a flight school, chances are it will rent enough that it covers all your costs. If you do a lease-back, what type of insurance must you carry? Commercial. Your rates will go up significantly, plus you will have to get 100hr inspections, and fix all the stuff the renters break. Before you get involved in one, do some searches on http://www.dejanews.com about leasebacks. The topic has been discussed at length in the rec.aviation.* newsgroups. -Nathan |
#38
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![]() "Jeff" wrote in message ... makes no sense to you, makes sense to me since I am the one payig the bills for it. I would buy a plane with a factory reman before I bought one with a who knows what kind of overhaul. Must be your first Continental. Those of us that have Continentals know not to get a factory engine. The bottom ends are great, but the cylinders are crap. |
#39
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Bob Fry wrote:
: Neither one had taken into account the cost of an engine overhaul, : IMO. Both did eventually sell; one for about $4000-$5000 less than : what I paid for my similar, low-time model. So some discounting (for : high-time engine) was done by seller and buyer, but not enough. I think it's generally considered (and seems to hold true) that the discount on a run-out engine is about 1/2 the cost of buying a new one. When we were looking for a Cherokee, one with a "fresh" engine cost $5-7k more than one that was runout. A mid-cost/effort overhaul for a 4-banger like that would be $10-15k. Seems to be about the same with the avionics.... adds about half the value of what it costs to the plane. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * The prime directive of Linux: * * - learn what you don't know, * * - teach what you do. * * (Just my 20 USm$) * ************************************************** *********************** |
#40
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"The Weiss Family" wrote in message
... I'm trying to figure out how much renting I have to do before it becomes plausible to own. Any advice as to insurance, fixed and variable costs, etc. If you do an honest assessment of the cost to own an airplane, virtually no airplane owner can operate his airplane cheaper than he coudl rent the same airplane. This is particularly true for a C172-class airplane which is unlikely to be used on a very regular basis for practical transporation except in some very specific regions of the country which almost always have VFR weather, i.e. the Southwest. Reasons to buy an airplane include not having to deal with restrictions on keeping a rental airplane for a week or so trip, having access to an airplane not available for rental, having control over maintenance, having control over modifications/avionics, and simply pride of ownership. These are all fine reasons to buy an airplane -- do not think that it will be cheaper than owning, however. If you do buy an airplane, consider that the cost of a surprise engine overhaul can easily be 25% of the value of the airplane. Imagine one day getting a call from your mechanic with the bad news that you need to do an unexpected early engine overhaul. If you would not be able to handle that financially, then either do not buy the airplane or else seek a partner to buy the airplane with you. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
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