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#11
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Peter R. wrote:
On 5/4/2007 8:28:45 PM, "Dan Luke" wrote: Angel Flight was in a bit of a bind to fill this one, so I let them talk me into it, even though it is 650 nm and will end up taking six hours or so, ground time included. Dan, I thought you were selling your airplane? Awesome of you to take a flight of this duration for Angel Flight, in any regard. I agree. I only made one flight of that duration when I was flying for AirLifeLine many years ago. I was based at ELM and most of my pickups weren't local, but typically weren't too far away (Harrisburg, Erie, Williamsport, etc.). However, I flew one flight that required me to pickup up the patient in Cincinnati and fly him to Philly. By the time I flew from ELM to Cincy, to Philly and returned to ELM, I'd used the major portion of a Saturday. It was a great flight, however. Matt |
#12
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You have to apportion sunk costs to the hours you fly somehow or you aren't calculating the true cost of flying.
The issue isn't the cost of flying, it's the cost of flying more. Jose -- Get high on gasoline: fly an airplane. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#13
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"Matt Whiting" wrote in message
... Nathan Young wrote: On Sat, 05 May 2007 12:21:27 GMT, Matt Whiting wrote: ... Sunk cost doesn't matter. You have to apportion sunk costs to the hours you fly somehow or you aren't calculating the true cost of flying. The cost per hour of flying in a given year is total costs (fixed & variable) divided by the number of hours flown that year. So, the more you fly, the less it costs per hour (which is true even if you don't include fixed costs like hangers, insurance, and stuff). He's saving money by making this trip and, thus, reducing the cost per hour of the rest of the flying he does, right? -- Geoff The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate. |
#14
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Jose wrote:
You have to apportion sunk costs to the hours you fly somehow or you aren't calculating the true cost of flying. The issue isn't the cost of flying, it's the cost of flying more. exactly. It is called "incremental cost". It's the difference between flying and leaving the airplane in the hangar. Assuming that the decision to own an airplane was made independent from the decision to do angel flights, this incremental cost is considerably lower for owners than for renters, true. However, isn't it that the motivation for angel flights is largely "I want to fly, and rather than just go for a 100$ Burger I could just as well help somebody out while doing it". Viewed like this there isn't really much difference whether you rent or own the plane you use for AF. regards, Friedrich |
#15
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![]() "Jose" wrote in message t... You have to apportion sunk costs to the hours you fly somehow or you aren't calculating the true cost of flying. The issue isn't the cost of flying, it's the cost of flying more. Jose -- Get high on gasoline: fly an airplane. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. For pilots who fly primariliy for enjoyment (ie: you don't fly mainly for business purposes or transportation, etc.) I'm sure that the number of hours you can fly is constrained by time or budgetary considerations whether you are an owner or renter. So, I wouldn't think that donating some of your flying time to such causes should increase the overall cost of your flying habit. It would also give you an excuse to use up some of your self-allotted time and maybe bring additional enjoyment or satisfaction. You still get to pursue your hobby and since you are actually flying cross-country you could actually reduce the overall cost of flying since you are increasing the number of cruising hours with respect to the number of those pesky take-off and (shudder!) landing hours. You don't have to fly *more*. Like A Huffington says, "The plane was going somewhere anyways". TP |
#16
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![]() I'm taking the second of three legs. Flying from Mobile to Vicksburg, MS, picking up a single pax and dropping her off in Marianna, FL, then back to BFM. I thought that BF was in "E". I didn't know there was also one in "M" !?! Sorry, TP :-) |
#17
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![]() "Kobra" wrote in message ... BS!!! How about engine amorization and maintainence amorization. You can add about 17 bucks per hour for the engine and about 30 smackers for the maintainence amorization. With fuel at 4.40 a gallon and 9 gph on average and through in another dollar for oil you have about 87 to 88 dollars per hour true cost. You just concisely explained to the world why I rent. Vaughn |
#18
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![]() "muff528" wrote in message news:K74%h.674$wy2.278@trnddc03... For pilots who fly primariliy for enjoyment (ie: you don't fly mainly for business purposes or transportation, etc.) I'm sure that the number of hours you can fly is constrained by time or budgetary considerations whether you are an owner or renter. So, I wouldn't think that donating some of your flying time to such Assuming that your Angel Flight expenses are deductible, a flight should be considerably cheaper than an equivalent $100 burger flight. That said, as a VFR pilot I would not want anyone's medical care to depend on me actually getting to any particular destination on any particular schedule. It seems like 30 to 50% of my burger flights are aborted or vastly modified due to weather. |
#19
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![]() "Vaughn Simon" wrote You just concisely explained to the world why I rent. It depends on how much you fly. Many people have said that it begins to be cheaper to own than rent at a little under 200 hours per year. -- Jim in NC |
#20
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![]() "Peter R." wrote: Angel Flight was in a bit of a bind to fill this one, so I let them talk me into it, even though it is 650 nm and will end up taking six hours or so, ground time included. Dan, I thought you were selling your airplane? It's still for sale. In fact, the first leg pilot I met today is looking for a nice Cutlass for his flight school, and might be a buyer. Awesome of you to take a flight of this duration for Angel Flight, in any regard. I'm certainly no hero. I'm feeling pretty worn out right now, but it was a lot of fun as usual. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
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