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On Apr 5, 12:47 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote:
With Avgas topping five bucks a gallon, I find myself asking: How much more will it take before GA is completely unaffordable? At what price point will all the current "weekend pilots" be driven from the market? Example: While on our trip back from Florida a couple of weeks ago, we paid $5.20 per gallon in St. Louis. Since we needed 60 gallons, we paid over $300 for a single tank of gas -- something I *never* thought I'd see. That price has more than doubled in just the last few years, and there appears to be no end in sight. So the question is: How much higher must gas go up before *you* hang up your headphones for the last time? Anyone care to predict what year the last personal flights will occur in America? In my case, I rent a nice, fairly new Australian "ultralight" (really an LSA) for about $110 an hour. It burns just over 4 gallons/hour of premium autogas, so if the price of fuel doubled, I'd only be out another 20 dollars. In the scheme of things that isn't very much. A full tank of fuel costs about $140 for over 6 hours of flight time. When I tried going for my PPL I was paying $250 an hour for a clapped out 172. I have no idea how people can justify the extra cost of GA in Australia. Paying almost a weeks wages for a long cross country gets old really fast. Cheers, Al |
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:6LBJj.53005$TT4.41626@attbi_s22... With Avgas topping five bucks a gallon, I find myself asking: How much more will it take before GA is completely unaffordable? At what price point will all the current "weekend pilots" be driven from the market? Example: While on our trip back from Florida a couple of weeks ago, we paid $5.20 per gallon in St. Louis. Since we needed 60 gallons, we paid over $300 for a single tank of gas -- something I *never* thought I'd see. That price has more than doubled in just the last few years, and there appears to be no end in sight. So the question is: How much higher must gas go up before *you* hang up your headphones for the last time? Anyone care to predict what year the last personal flights will occur in America? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Over my ~13 years in aviation, fuel prices have increased by about 100%. That's about 5.5% a year, against everything else which is inflating at ~3% a year. Much of the run-up on fuel prices is due to currency fluctuations, which have added something like a dollar to your cost of avgas. Most of that currency fluctuation (devaluation of the dollar) is a recent development. Take that out of the equation, and gas is no more expensive today (inflation adjusted) than it was 13 years ago. What does that mean? Unless we get our fiscal policies cleaned up, prices on imported products (i.e. avgas) will continue to increase faster than domestic products. Add that to the increasing energy demand in China and India, which will add to inflationary pressures on fuel, and gasoline ain't gonna be cheap. When will it run people out of the air? Dunno, but the losses start at the margins. How many ratty Cherokees and C-150's do you see buzzing around these days? Not as many as you used to. IMO, those people may have been the first victims. Light twins have taken a big hit in value (and flying time), which is a function of fuel cost. Similarly, I'm starting to see good deals on aircraft that have historically held their value well, like Commanches. It takes a lot of gas to run a 250 hp engine. Cirrus is doing well, as are several new aircraft manufacturers. If a customer can afford a $350k airplane, s/he can afford the fuel for it. The RV's are doing OK too. If you have $80-100k to invest over a 4 year build period, you obviously have significant disposable income and when the airplane is finished, you spend the bucks on flying rather than building. To answer your question, though, smaller, cleaner airframes (RV's, LSA's, etc) will continue to make flying affordable for the weekend flyer if the weekend flyers' mission is 2 people and 50 pounds of baggage. BUT, it will become expensive to carry around too much airframe - buzzing two people around for hamburgers in a draggy airframe with a big engine isn't the wave of the future... KB |
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Just look at Cirrus's order book as one indication: Are people buying the
SR20, with an engine that consumes less fuel? Nope, they are buying the SR22, with a gas guzzler. Ergo: No problem yet, in the good ole USofA. Bigger is still better. This is an interesting phenomenon. Cirrus is still apparently finding enough wealthy pilots to prosper -- from where I know not. I'm extremely happy for them, however. As long as there are Cirrus' being cranked out, GA is still in good shape. Unfortunately, I think the vast majority of pilots on America are closer to my demographic, small business owners flying around in 35 year old planes who are being squeezed by energy prices on all sides. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#14
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Over my ~13 years in aviation, fuel prices have increased by about 100%.
That's about 5.5% a year, against everything else which is inflating at ~3% a year. Much of the run-up on fuel prices is due to currency fluctuations, which have added something like a dollar to your cost of avgas. Most of that currency fluctuation (devaluation of the dollar) is a recent development. Take that out of the equation, and gas is no more expensive today (inflation adjusted) than it was 13 years ago. Yeah, I know all that -- but in real life you can't take that out of the equation. Our dollar is in the dumpster, and we're all getting the pinch because of it. When will it run people out of the air? Dunno, but the losses start at the margins. How many ratty Cherokees and C-150's do you see buzzing around these days? Not as many as you used to. IMO, those people may have been the first victims. Yep. The beaters are still on the field, but I don't see them fly anymore. My A&P says that he's seeing an awful lot of planes coming in for annual inspections with few -- or even NO -- hours since last year. There are an awful lot of owners hanging on by their fingernails. Light twins have taken a big hit in value (and flying time), which is a function of fuel cost. I only know one private party still flying a twin, and most of the charters have switched to turbines. Just a few years ago, they were all over the airport. Similarly, I'm starting to see good deals on aircraft that have historically held their value well, like Commanches. It takes a lot of gas to run a 250 hp engine. Yep, our O-540-powered Pathfinder has taken a significant hit in value. Of course, almost all aircraft have. It's really a buyer's market out there right now. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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buttman wrote in
: On Apr 4, 8:47*pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote: With Avgas topping five bucks a gallon, I find myself asking: How much mor e will it take before GA is completely unaffordable? * At what price point will all the current "weekend pilots" be driven from the market? Example: While on our trip back from Florida a couple of weeks ago, we pai d $5.20 per gallon in St. Louis. *Since we needed 60 gallons, we paid over $300 for a single tank of gas -- something I *never* thought I'd see. That price has more than doubled in just the last few years, and there appears to be no end in sight. *So the question is: How much higher must gas go up before *you* hang up your headphones for the last time? * Anyone c are to predict what year the last personal flights will occur in America? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" I'm not an economist, but it seems with the increase in demand for alternatively fueled cars, (hybrids, hydrogen powered, etc), the demand for fuel will go way down, bring the price down with it. Additionally, once the auto industry completely converts to hydrogen (or whatever fuel type comes out on top), that technology will trickle into aircraft engines. God you#re an idiot. Where wil the hydrogen come from fjukktard? Bertie |
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Yep, our O-540-powered Pathfinder has taken a significant hit in value. Of course, almost all aircraft have. It's really a buyer's market out there right now. Yes, I know. :-) I've been wanting to buy an airplane since selling my 50% 182 partnership back in 1999 when my company nearly went bust, but the cost was just too high given one kid in college, myself in graduate school and another not far from college. However, I've been looking at 182RGs (I want to finish my commercial) and the prices have dropped dramatically the last couple of years. There is one nearby me that was advertised for $95K a year ago, dropped to 86K a few months ago and I just saw a new add for it at $77K! 77 is my graduation year so maybe this is a sign! :-) Then again, I like the number 70 also and I suspect by mid-summer when the recession is officially declared, the price may get to that. I came very close to buying an Arrow last winter, but the owner is asking way above Vref and so far refuses to deal so that one likely won't happen. It is more nicely equipped than the 182 (the 182 has a high time engine and no GPS, but has LORAN, a FD, S-TEC 60 AP and other goodies). I prefer the 182 for the additional interior room, extra door, extra speed, range, useful load and high wing, but the Arrow would be more economical to operate and I believe the gear is less troublesome than the Cessna singles and it really is a very nice Arrow inside and out. But $98K for a 77 Arrow is just way above market at present and I really don't think the market for GA singles is ever going to return so paying above market today is almost certainly money thrown away. Fuel cost and future availability and the constant advance of regulations is slowing dooming GA (low-end anyway) to the same fate as Europe. Matt |
#17
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Jay,
This is an interesting phenomenon. Isn't it? I'm not so sure, however, that even you aren't part of the phenomenon - no offense meant or implied, just making a non-judgmental observation. After all, how many of those 235 horses your Dakota (?) has do you really need? Wouldn't an Archer do 99 percent of your missions? And with a much lower fuel bill? How many US pilots are there complaining about all the fuel their Bo or 210 or even 182 uses? Well, I got news: Those are BIG airplanes with BIG engines. I live in the land of 13 USD per gallon Avgas - and I KNOW I could not feed 550 or even 520 cubic inches. That's why I fly a Tobago at 115 knots and not a Trinidad at 150. And that's why I am in a 4-person partnership. Single ownership in Germany? Forget it! -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#18
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I'm still paying more in Canada. When our dollar climbed up, prices
didn't lower either. Forget the cost, full steam ahead! John Jay Honeck wrote: With Avgas topping five bucks a gallon, I find myself asking: How much more will it take before GA is completely unaffordable? At what price point will all the current "weekend pilots" be driven from the market? Example: While on our trip back from Florida a couple of weeks ago, we paid $5.20 per gallon in St. Louis. Since we needed 60 gallons, we paid over $300 for a single tank of gas -- something I *never* thought I'd see. That price has more than doubled in just the last few years, and there appears to be no end in sight. So the question is: How much higher must gas go up before *you* hang up your headphones for the last time? Anyone care to predict what year the last personal flights will occur in America? |
#19
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![]() Al Borowski wrote: On Apr 5, 12:47 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote: With Avgas topping five bucks a gallon, I find myself asking: How much more will it take before GA is completely unaffordable? At what price point will all the current "weekend pilots" be driven from the market? Example: While on our trip back from Florida a couple of weeks ago, we paid $5.20 per gallon in St. Louis. Since we needed 60 gallons, we paid over $300 for a single tank of gas -- something I *never* thought I'd see. That price has more than doubled in just the last few years, and there appears to be no end in sight. So the question is: How much higher must gas go up before *you* hang up your headphones for the last time? Anyone care to predict what year the last personal flights will occur in America? In my case, I rent a nice, fairly new Australian "ultralight" (really an LSA) for about $110 an hour. It burns just over 4 gallons/hour of premium autogas, so if the price of fuel doubled, I'd only be out another 20 dollars. In the scheme of things that isn't very much. A full tank of fuel costs about $140 for over 6 hours of flight time. When I tried going for my PPL I was paying $250 an hour for a clapped out 172. I have no idea how people can justify the extra cost of GA in Australia. Paying almost a weeks wages for a long cross country gets old really fast. Cheers, Al I know the feeling. I fly GA, in Cessnas and Pipers here in the US. When I go to Australia I fly in a sportstar (LSA) as this is what I can afford over there. James. |
#20
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On Apr 4, 11:40 pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote:
"Morgans" wrote in message ... "Jay Honeck" wrote With Avgas topping five bucks a gallon, I find myself asking: How much more will it take before GA is completely unaffordable? At what price point will all the current "weekend pilots" be driven from the market? So the question is: How much higher must gas go up before *you* hang up your headphones for the last time? Anyone care to predict what year the last personal flights will occur in America? No, there will always be some that have enough money, but the question is more like, how long will it be until the number of active pilots is cut in half, and then, half again? The trend will be to see STC's to convert more and more engines to lower compression cylinders and pistons, to allow engines to burn auto gas, I think. That, and cleaner, slicker airframes will allow them to fly more miles to the gallon. Look at some of the RV's that get something like 25 miles to the gallon, of auto gas. Also, the continuing trend to the small LSA airframes, or the likes of them, perhaps not LSA, but the same size, and faster. Still, the classics will still fly, many only as show items, like classic hot rods that only go out to go to shows. I do fear, as you, that gas prices will continue to price more and more people out of the ability to continue flying. I hope a solution to switch nearly everything to a more affordable fuel is made available, and soon. -- Jim in NC The fact is that, even though it does have me priced out for the moment, this really is cyclical. The US dollar is currently depressed, which contributes to the problem. In addition, for most of the past forty years, crude oil has been the inflation leader--oil prices ratchet up and eventually stabilize, and then the rest of the economy catches up. This time, we had the housing bubble as well, so there are (at least) two highly inflated segments for the rest of the economy to emulate. I don't especially like it, and as the financial ads always say "past performance is not a guarantee of future results"; but the past is still the best indicator that we have available. In other words, so long as tax rates are indexed for inflation, aviation will be as affordable in a few years as it was a few years ago. I used to hold the same optimistic view that things always get better after they get worse. But the economy doesn't move ahead or catch up just because it has done so in the past. The economy is driven by people who are healthy, innovative and are adventurous. I am concerned that we have been on a precipitous decline in all these areas for some time now. The old C-152 does not carry two adults anymore. Overweight is normal, and obese is now overweight. Diabetes is a household word. Children are growing up with all kinds of problems, drugs and crime being the least of them. I work in education, and in recent years I have graduated many people with doctorate and masters degrees in high- tech areas whom I would consider frighteningly incompetent. These are the people who go on to become scientific advisers to governments and other organizations where they make decisions that affects everyone in the world. I am not the least bit surprised that we have made many stupid and dangerous decisions in the past. The energy crisis should not have come as a surprise to any one. The reason for our low dollar is the national debt, but we are doing nothing to fix that problem. That could be offset if there were lots of innovation and a healthy population. But a mounting debt combined with obesity and declining health looks like a bad combination for a bright future. I am afraid that the party might be coming to an end. But for the sake of my children, I hope I am wrong and you are right. |
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