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James,
I'm already an airplane owner and I'm completely sympathetic with your point of view. At least once a month I wonder if it's all worth it, but that's probably more a function of how I use my plane rather than strict economics: if I was using my plane for business, rather than a weekend escape from the usual grind I might not second guess myself so much. But as it stands now, even on my modest PA28-140, I've spent a (for me) shocking amount of money. It's quite sobering when you realize that the last few years of flying and maintenance could have provided a nice chunk of your daughter's college fund (not to imply that I've put flying in front of my daughter, I've been saving for college too, but if I didn't fly I'd have been way ahead of the game). When I bought my plane I decided that I would give ownership a try for two years, then rethink the situation. I chose two years because the first year is not always representative, especially your first annual. I decided to buy something modest so I wouldn't break the bank, and in the first year I was working on an IFR rating so I had plenty of excuses to fly. I'm halfway through the trial period now, I have my IFR rating, but few excuses to fly. My wife puts up a good front, but flying scares her and she's only been up twice. She's suggested sailing instead which is inline with your comment that flying is interesting, but people feel more comfortable on a boat. My daughter isn't yet old enough to enjoy this so it's basically just me on the weekends. Anticipating that this might happen, I decided that I would try and fly for charity as another way to use the plane, but I'm waiting to see if the 500 hour rule goes into effect (I'm about 100 hours short there). We'll see how I feel at the end of the year... So let's see, I think I covered about four threads he is owning worth it...how can I justify flying...my spouse doesn't like it...I may just give up ownership altogether. Oh, I forgot the FAA. Actually, I don't have enough data to have an opinion the we haven't formally crossed paths yet, and I don't think I've owned long enough to fully understand how badly I may be getting taken. cheers, mark "James Blakely" wrote in message ... Well, I may be someone who can give some information. Got my pilot's certificate about 5 years age, been a renter ever since. I hate renting. So much so, I've decided that I'm not going to fly unless I own an airplane. I have enough money saved up so that I can buy my target airplane (182RG) outright. I haven't flown in over 6 months. Why? The economy. I'm looking at that 182RG fund as a pretty nice "rainy day fund" if I ever loose my job. (Pretty good possibility, the company I work for hasn't made a sale since November 2001.) The thing I don't like about flying is all the oversight. You sneeze at the wrong time, the FAA is threatening you with revocation and civil fines. Really, I haven't enjoyed flying since the pop-up TFRs started. So, in looking for something to fill my spare time, I've taken up sailing. I don't find it nearly as satisfying as flying, but I'm way more at ease. So, although less satisfying, I find it about as enjoyable as flying. Now, unlike some, I'm planing on being a trailer sailor. I'm not going to keep my boat at a marina. (Slips cost about as much as t-hangers do.) So, I'm limited to a 22' lead keel or a 27 foot with water ballast boat. You can find good used boats in this range for less than $10,000. Hell, a new Hunter 27' with water ballast is $17,000, and that includes a trailer. So, basically, I could buy a new boat and not worry about not having to lose all my nest egg. Also, I don't know of any cases of the Coast Guard dry-docking an entire fleet of boats until some maintenance is performed. I find that people are more interested in that I'm a pilot but that they are much more willing to go sailing with me than to go flying. So, I find sailing much more communal than flying. I'm shocked how anyone can hop into a boat and take off. I guess that's my FAA over-regulate-everything indoctrination. Also, I find boaters to be much less arrogant and much more friendly that pilots. The really sad thing is, I'm not really missing flying. My medical expires in May, I've decided that if I don't suddenly decide that I miss flying, I'm going to give it up for good in May. Sometime between now and then I'm planning on breaking my no rental policy just to go up once again to see if I miss it. "Dave Covert" wrote in message ... This is something that has puzzled me for a while... I (a private pilot) work in the pleasure marine industry and have noticed that almost anyone who wants to own a boat does own a boat. Now, some boats are indeed pretty cheap, but a $20,000 boat is fairly common (approx cost of a 150?). Here in the Clear Lake area of Texas there are something like 10,000 boats sitting in marina slips with an average cost of something like $30,000 each... many cost way, way more than that. A boat slip here on the Texas coast will run you about $5/foot (which is cheap, I know) and insurance for a $100,000 boat will run you maybe $2,000 a year. Most leave their slips once or twice a year. Marine maintenance and gear is not cheap either. That is a whole lot of expense for so little use. That is 10,000 people, here in Houston alone, that never bothered to take a class in boating, but that are willing to drop $30,000 on one, pay $150-$250 on slip rent and $100-$150 per month on insurance. After so much effort learning to fly, why do pilots not do the same thing? Whereas most boaters own a boat, most pilots do not own a plane. Is it initial cost? Boats and planes cost about the same, so I don't think that is it. Is it storage? A boat slip can cost a bit less than a hanger, or a bit more, but planes can use cheap tie-downs. Do people not buy planes because they might have to tie it down outside? Is it lack of use? Boaters have the same problem... when to use the boat in their spare time. Why would they spring for the boat and a pilot with the same time constraints not spring for the plane? Is it insurance? Plane insurance is more costly than boat insurance, but using a tie-down would make up for that. Is it maintenance? Perhaps that is it... planes are required to undergo expensive preventive maintenance where boats just get a tow back to shore when something breaks. Is it really the fear of 'the annual' that causes people not to fly? Is it fear of flying? Do people learn to fly because they want the challenge but secretly believe they are just asking to make their wife a widow every time they fly? Do people not trust an airplane they could buy? I truly want to know the reason for this and the only way I am going to find out is to listen to more pilots. So please, if you are a pilot, and you don't own a plane, please email me with a candid explanation as to why you personally don't own one. I will compile the 'data' and post it back to the group once I have some idea of the answer. Dave 74 Grumman AA5, N9560L dave(a)thecoverts.com |
#2
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Your situation is exactly what I'm afraid will happen to me. When I finally
decided to buy, the thought was (at first, at least) "boy, if I owned my own airplane, things would be a lot better." But then my cynical side spoke up and I realized that if I buy an airplane and decide that I still don't get enough enjoyment out of it, then I'll have to sell it. Not a pretty scenario. "Mark Astley" wrote in message ... James, I'm already an airplane owner and I'm completely sympathetic with your point of view. At least once a month I wonder if it's all worth it, but that's probably more a function of how I use my plane rather than strict economics: if I was using my plane for business, rather than a weekend escape from the usual grind I might not second guess myself so much. But as it stands now, even on my modest PA28-140, I've spent a (for me) shocking amount of money. It's quite sobering when you realize that the last few years of flying and maintenance could have provided a nice chunk of your daughter's college fund (not to imply that I've put flying in front of my daughter, I've been saving for college too, but if I didn't fly I'd have been way ahead of the game). When I bought my plane I decided that I would give ownership a try for two years, then rethink the situation. I chose two years because the first year is not always representative, especially your first annual. I decided to buy something modest so I wouldn't break the bank, and in the first year I was working on an IFR rating so I had plenty of excuses to fly. I'm halfway through the trial period now, I have my IFR rating, but few excuses to fly. My wife puts up a good front, but flying scares her and she's only been up twice. She's suggested sailing instead which is inline with your comment that flying is interesting, but people feel more comfortable on a boat. My daughter isn't yet old enough to enjoy this so it's basically just me on the weekends. Anticipating that this might happen, I decided that I would try and fly for charity as another way to use the plane, but I'm waiting to see if the 500 hour rule goes into effect (I'm about 100 hours short there). We'll see how I feel at the end of the year... So let's see, I think I covered about four threads he is owning worth it...how can I justify flying...my spouse doesn't like it...I may just give up ownership altogether. Oh, I forgot the FAA. Actually, I don't have enough data to have an opinion the we haven't formally crossed paths yet, and I don't think I've owned long enough to fully understand how badly I may be getting taken. cheers, mark "James Blakely" wrote in message ... Well, I may be someone who can give some information. Got my pilot's certificate about 5 years age, been a renter ever since. I hate renting. So much so, I've decided that I'm not going to fly unless I own an airplane. I have enough money saved up so that I can buy my target airplane (182RG) outright. I haven't flown in over 6 months. Why? The economy. I'm looking at that 182RG fund as a pretty nice "rainy day fund" if I ever loose my job. (Pretty good possibility, the company I work for hasn't made a sale since November 2001.) The thing I don't like about flying is all the oversight. You sneeze at the wrong time, the FAA is threatening you with revocation and civil fines. Really, I haven't enjoyed flying since the pop-up TFRs started. So, in looking for something to fill my spare time, I've taken up sailing. I don't find it nearly as satisfying as flying, but I'm way more at ease. So, although less satisfying, I find it about as enjoyable as flying. Now, unlike some, I'm planing on being a trailer sailor. I'm not going to keep my boat at a marina. (Slips cost about as much as t-hangers do.) So, I'm limited to a 22' lead keel or a 27 foot with water ballast boat. You can find good used boats in this range for less than $10,000. Hell, a new Hunter 27' with water ballast is $17,000, and that includes a trailer. So, basically, I could buy a new boat and not worry about not having to lose all my nest egg. Also, I don't know of any cases of the Coast Guard dry-docking an entire fleet of boats until some maintenance is performed. I find that people are more interested in that I'm a pilot but that they are much more willing to go sailing with me than to go flying. So, I find sailing much more communal than flying. I'm shocked how anyone can hop into a boat and take off. I guess that's my FAA over-regulate-everything indoctrination. Also, I find boaters to be much less arrogant and much more friendly that pilots. The really sad thing is, I'm not really missing flying. My medical expires in May, I've decided that if I don't suddenly decide that I miss flying, I'm going to give it up for good in May. Sometime between now and then I'm planning on breaking my no rental policy just to go up once again to see if I miss it. "Dave Covert" wrote in message ... This is something that has puzzled me for a while... I (a private pilot) work in the pleasure marine industry and have noticed that almost anyone who wants to own a boat does own a boat. Now, some boats are indeed pretty cheap, but a $20,000 boat is fairly common (approx cost of a 150?). Here in the Clear Lake area of Texas there are something like 10,000 boats sitting in marina slips with an average cost of something like $30,000 each... many cost way, way more than that. A boat slip here on the Texas coast will run you about $5/foot (which is cheap, I know) and insurance for a $100,000 boat will run you maybe $2,000 a year. Most leave their slips once or twice a year. Marine maintenance and gear is not cheap either. That is a whole lot of expense for so little use. That is 10,000 people, here in Houston alone, that never bothered to take a class in boating, but that are willing to drop $30,000 on one, pay $150-$250 on slip rent and $100-$150 per month on insurance. After so much effort learning to fly, why do pilots not do the same thing? Whereas most boaters own a boat, most pilots do not own a plane. Is it initial cost? Boats and planes cost about the same, so I don't think that is it. Is it storage? A boat slip can cost a bit less than a hanger, or a bit more, but planes can use cheap tie-downs. Do people not buy planes because they might have to tie it down outside? Is it lack of use? Boaters have the same problem... when to use the boat in their spare time. Why would they spring for the boat and a pilot with the same time constraints not spring for the plane? Is it insurance? Plane insurance is more costly than boat insurance, but using a tie-down would make up for that. Is it maintenance? Perhaps that is it... planes are required to undergo expensive preventive maintenance where boats just get a tow back to shore when something breaks. Is it really the fear of 'the annual' that causes people not to fly? Is it fear of flying? Do people learn to fly because they want the challenge but secretly believe they are just asking to make their wife a widow every time they fly? Do people not trust an airplane they could buy? I truly want to know the reason for this and the only way I am going to find out is to listen to more pilots. So please, if you are a pilot, and you don't own a plane, please email me with a candid explanation as to why you personally don't own one. I will compile the 'data' and post it back to the group once I have some idea of the answer. Dave 74 Grumman AA5, N9560L dave(a)thecoverts.com |
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I own a boat and rent my airplane.
The boat I own is probably the marine equivalent of a Piper Warrior (which is what I fly) -- it's a 15 foot 1987 ski boat with a 120 horsepower I/O motor. I rent the Warrior through my flying club. The boat cost me less than $3,000 to buy. When it needed an engine overhaul, that cost me $1800 including labor. The Warrior I fly would probably cost me about $30-40,000 to buy. I bet an engine overhaul for the Warrior would be five figures. The flying club is great. It is economical and takes most of the hassles out of ownership. It's pretty hard to justify owning a plane when the club is so good. There is no equivalent for boating, if there were maybe fewer people would own boats. But the fact is that since I took up flying, the boat has been rotting in my front yard. I really need to get rid of it, but I just don't want to deal with it for the small amount it's worth. Let's see. Owned boat: hook the trailer up, tow it to the lake, put it in, hope it starts. Big hassle factor before even starting to enjoy it. Counting all that "preflight" for the boat is usually about an hour. If it doesn't start, take it back out and tow it to a shop. If it does work, I am confined to buzzing around that particular lake. When done, reverse the above process taking it home. And if I don't use it for a while, it deteriorates. Club Plane: it's there on the ramp ready to go. Preflight is usually about 30 mins. It gets flown regularly whether I have time to fly or not, so it's not rotting when I can't fly and for most squawks someone else notices it first and either it's been fixed or I know it going in. Its maint is taken care of (club has an A&P). Whenever I find there is a squawk or a failure I don't stay awake nights worrying "oh great how much is THIS one going to cost me". I can go basically anywhere I want in the plane, instead of being confined to one lake like on a boat. Only drawback of club vs. ownership: availability on nice weekends. But is it worth all the extra cost to just overcome that one drawback and add some more drawbacks and expenses that come with ownership? I have figured that even if you gave me a plane for free, there is no honest accounting under which it doesn't cost more to fly than the club. In short, now that I fly, boats bore me. But it's really hard to justify buying a plane when renting through the club is such a good deal. An equivalent boat is much cheaper to buy but IMO nowhere near as enjoyable. JM ramblings on the subject. Dave Covert wrote: This is something that has puzzled me for a while... I (a private pilot) work in the pleasure marine industry and have noticed that almost anyone who wants to own a boat does own a boat. Now, some boats are indeed pretty cheap, but a $20,000 boat is fairly common (approx cost of a 150?). Here in the Clear Lake area of Texas there are something like 10,000 boats sitting in marina slips with an average cost of something like $30,000 each... many cost way, way more than that. A boat slip here on the Texas coast will run you about $5/foot (which is cheap, I know) and insurance for a $100,000 boat will run you maybe $2,000 a year. Most leave their slips once or twice a year. Marine maintenance and gear is not cheap either. That is a whole lot of expense for so little use. That is 10,000 people, here in Houston alone, that never bothered to take a class in boating, but that are willing to drop $30,000 on one, pay $150-$250 on slip rent and $100-$150 per month on insurance. After so much effort learning to fly, why do pilots not do the same thing? Whereas most boaters own a boat, most pilots do not own a plane. Is it initial cost? Boats and planes cost about the same, so I don't think that is it. Is it storage? A boat slip can cost a bit less than a hanger, or a bit more, but planes can use cheap tie-downs. Do people not buy planes because they might have to tie it down outside? Is it lack of use? Boaters have the same problem... when to use the boat in their spare time. Why would they spring for the boat and a pilot with the same time constraints not spring for the plane? Is it insurance? Plane insurance is more costly than boat insurance, but using a tie-down would make up for that. Is it maintenance? Perhaps that is it... planes are required to undergo expensive preventive maintenance where boats just get a tow back to shore when something breaks. Is it really the fear of 'the annual' that causes people not to fly? Is it fear of flying? Do people learn to fly because they want the challenge but secretly believe they are just asking to make their wife a widow every time they fly? Do people not trust an airplane they could buy? I truly want to know the reason for this and the only way I am going to find out is to listen to more pilots. So please, if you are a pilot, and you don't own a plane, please email me with a candid explanation as to why you personally don't own one. I will compile the 'data' and post it back to the group once I have some idea of the answer. Dave 74 Grumman AA5, N9560L dave(a)thecoverts.com |
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Three reasons I can think of to buy:
1) availability on weekends and for short flights where minimums would kick in (eg, a day trip to Block Island..a 20 minute flight) 2) I fly IFR. When I was renting, I would not have flown any of the rentals I had access to into serious IFR conditions. My plane, I know when things are not quite right and get them fixed before they become a problem. I can equip the plane the way I want, and maintain it to the level that makes me comfortable. I know when I get in it, that everything will be left the way it was last time I flew it. 3) When the family exceeds seats on a typical rental (like mine does), you may not be able to find any rental that suits your needs. I've got 4 kids and a 5th due any day now. I have a Cherokee Six with the seventh seat option. Fits the family plus the dog. Try renting a six seat single. There are a few around, but none within several hours driving time of my home (the only one I know of in the north east is cross keys airport in southern NJ). I did find that owning, I fly much more than I did when I was renting. Short trips to the local islands, or relatively short trips where the time to fly is approximately equal to the time to drive are now done by air. It wouldn't have happened renting. I also fly places on weekends more frequently (often on a spur of the moment). Renting, you had to plan way ahead, and had near zero flexibility if the weather was bad. TTA Cherokee Driver wrote: I own a boat and rent my airplane. The boat I own is probably the marine equivalent of a Piper Warrior (which is what I fly) -- it's a 15 foot 1987 ski boat with a 120 horsepower I/O motor. I rent the Warrior through my flying club. The boat cost me less than $3,000 to buy. When it needed an engine overhaul, that cost me $1800 including labor. The Warrior I fly would probably cost me about $30-40,000 to buy. I bet an engine overhaul for the Warrior would be five figures. The flying club is great. It is economical and takes most of the hassles out of ownership. It's pretty hard to justify owning a plane when the club is so good. There is no equivalent for boating, if there were maybe fewer people would own boats. But the fact is that since I took up flying, the boat has been rotting in my front yard. I really need to get rid of it, but I just don't want to deal with it for the small amount it's worth. Let's see. Owned boat: hook the trailer up, tow it to the lake, put it in, hope it starts. Big hassle factor before even starting to enjoy it. Counting all that "preflight" for the boat is usually about an hour. If it doesn't start, take it back out and tow it to a shop. If it does work, I am confined to buzzing around that particular lake. When done, reverse the above process taking it home. And if I don't use it for a while, it deteriorates. Club Plane: it's there on the ramp ready to go. Preflight is usually about 30 mins. It gets flown regularly whether I have time to fly or not, so it's not rotting when I can't fly and for most squawks someone else notices it first and either it's been fixed or I know it going in. Its maint is taken care of (club has an A&P). Whenever I find there is a squawk or a failure I don't stay awake nights worrying "oh great how much is THIS one going to cost me". I can go basically anywhere I want in the plane, instead of being confined to one lake like on a boat. Only drawback of club vs. ownership: availability on nice weekends. But is it worth all the extra cost to just overcome that one drawback and add some more drawbacks and expenses that come with ownership? I have figured that even if you gave me a plane for free, there is no honest accounting under which it doesn't cost more to fly than the club. In short, now that I fly, boats bore me. But it's really hard to justify buying a plane when renting through the club is such a good deal. An equivalent boat is much cheaper to buy but IMO nowhere near as enjoyable. JM ramblings on the subject. Dave Covert wrote: This is something that has puzzled me for a while... I (a private pilot) work in the pleasure marine industry and have noticed that almost anyone who wants to own a boat does own a boat. Now, some boats are indeed pretty cheap, but a $20,000 boat is fairly common (approx cost of a 150?). Here in the Clear Lake area of Texas there are something like 10,000 boats sitting in marina slips with an average cost of something like $30,000 each... many cost way, way more than that. A boat slip here on the Texas coast will run you about $5/foot (which is cheap, I know) and insurance for a $100,000 boat will run you maybe $2,000 a year. Most leave their slips once or twice a year. Marine maintenance and gear is not cheap either. That is a whole lot of expense for so little use. That is 10,000 people, here in Houston alone, that never bothered to take a class in boating, but that are willing to drop $30,000 on one, pay $150-$250 on slip rent and $100-$150 per month on insurance. After so much effort learning to fly, why do pilots not do the same thing? Whereas most boaters own a boat, most pilots do not own a plane. Is it initial cost? Boats and planes cost about the same, so I don't think that is it. Is it storage? A boat slip can cost a bit less than a hanger, or a bit more, but planes can use cheap tie-downs. Do people not buy planes because they might have to tie it down outside? Is it lack of use? Boaters have the same problem... when to use the boat in their spare time. Why would they spring for the boat and a pilot with the same time constraints not spring for the plane? Is it insurance? Plane insurance is more costly than boat insurance, but using a tie-down would make up for that. Is it maintenance? Perhaps that is it... planes are required to undergo expensive preventive maintenance where boats just get a tow back to shore when something breaks. Is it really the fear of 'the annual' that causes people not to fly? Is it fear of flying? Do people learn to fly because they want the challenge but secretly believe they are just asking to make their wife a widow every time they fly? Do people not trust an airplane they could buy? I truly want to know the reason for this and the only way I am going to find out is to listen to more pilots. So please, if you are a pilot, and you don't own a plane, please email me with a candid explanation as to why you personally don't own one. I will compile the 'data' and post it back to the group once I have some idea of the answer. Dave 74 Grumman AA5, N9560L dave(a)thecoverts.com -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
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I bought my plane for the control of maintenance and peace of mind. I
fly my family in my Dakota, and I like the comfort of knowing that no item has been skimped on, and that the airplane hasn't been abused. I received my certification for coastal cruising and navigation from The Canadian Yaughting Association when I was 15, so I'm no stranger to boating. I now live in California. Los Angeles to be exact. The nearest fresh water worth dropping a boat into is a six hour drive. Any of my friends who own boats pay the same for their slip as I do for my hangar at KVNY. My hangar is $625 a month, most slips go from $15-$20 a foot, getting an Ocean boat under 30' is not worth it. My boating friends drop mucho coin into their boats for maintenance and improvements, salt water boats take a lot of abuse. So for California at least, the economics are pretty even between the two. For my money, there is only so many times I can sail out to Catalina and back, or sail down to Mexico to watch a Gray Whale float by. Plus, after getting my certification when I was 15, I find local sailing presents little challenge. Long distance sailing is another story, but that requires a lot of time, not something you can accomplish on a weekend. Whereas I am always facing new challenges with aviation, it is holding my interest better than sailing did. |
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"Dave Covert" wrote
I (a private pilot) work in the pleasure marine industry and have noticed that almost anyone who wants to own a boat does own a boat. Now, some boats are indeed pretty cheap, but a $20,000 boat is fairly common (approx cost of a 150?). Yes - an old, ragged-out C-150 that barely carries two people and no bags. I've seen the ads. I can be in a serviceable, ready-to-sail boat for well under $10K. I can't get any kind of airplane (other than maybe an experimental single seater) in serviceable, ready-to-fly condition for that. A boat slip here on the Texas coast will run you about $5/foot (which is cheap, I know) Yep. For a 30 foot boat that's what, $150/month? I pay over double that for a hangar. Marine maintenance and gear is not cheap either. Yes it is. Compare a new marine GPS to a new aviation (panel-mount) GPS. Compare a new marine RADAR to a new aviation RADAR. Compare a new marine engine to a new aviation engine. The price difference is huge. Is it initial cost? Boats and planes cost about the same, so I don't think that is it. No, you area wrong. A 4 person boat (one that can take 4 full size people, their stuff, and full fuel tanks) does NOT cost near as much as a boat that can do the same. Is it maintenance? Perhaps that is it... planes are required to undergo expensive preventive maintenance Maintenance is a huge issue. What's more, it's not the labor - it's the parts. I own a certified airplane, and it is my last. I will NEVER again buy a certified airplane. It's not because I need to pay an A&P. I have a friend who is an IA. He is happy to sign off my work - as long as I do it by the rules. That means using approved parts and processes. He knows that in most cases the approved parts are not only hideously overpriced but also grossly inferior, but he can't do anything else or he will lose his IA. My IA has sold his certified airplane and is now building an experimental so that he can stop doing things the FAA way, and start doing what makes sense. My biggest expense in owning a plane, and the biggest factor that keeps it from being as safe as it could be, is the FAA. I think the biggest factor that keeps most pilots from owning airplanes is the FAA. Michael |
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A gentleman on another mailing list I subscribe to offered an interesting
observation along these lines today. He was referring to the history of his plane, which apparently was actively flown all over the country for business travel back in the 40's and early 50's (paraphrased): When the planes were being made, the airlines of the day were not quite twice as fast, and the cost of airline travel was far higher. Today if you fly a fast piston powered airplane you're going, relative to the airlines, half as fast for four times the cost. Some grist for the mill, methinks. Henry Bibb |
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![]() Henry Bibb wrote: When the planes were being made, the airlines of the day were not quite twice as fast, and the cost of airline travel was far higher. Today if you fly a fast piston powered airplane you're going, relative to the airlines, half as fast for four times the cost. Some grist for the mill, methinks. Only if you're going further than about 1500 miles. We may not fly as fast, but we don't have to show up at the airport two hours ahead to get through security, and we don't have to fly 500 miles out of the way to go through some hub, and we don't have to spend an hour or two at a layover when we get to that hub. I cruise at 126 mph and I can beat Delta from my house in New Jersey to my mother's house in Knoxville, TN without pushing hard. George Patterson Love, n.: A form of temporary insanity afflicting the young. It is curable either by marriage or by removal of the afflicted from the circumstances under which he incurred the condition. It is sometimes fatal, but more often to the physician than to the patient. |
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G.R. Patterson III wrote:
Henry Bibb wrote: When the planes were being made, the airlines of the day were not quite twice as fast, and the cost of airline travel was far higher. Today if you fly a fast piston powered airplane you're going, relative to the airlines, half as fast for four times the cost. Some grist for the mill, methinks. Only if you're going further than about 1500 miles. We may not fly as fast, but we don't have to show up at the airport two hours ahead to get through security, and we don't have to fly 500 miles out of the way to go through some hub, and we don't have to spend an hour or two at a layover when we get to that hub. I cruise at 126 mph and I can beat Delta from my house in New Jersey to my mother's house in Knoxville, TN without pushing hard. I don't doubt it for this distance, but I also don't think GA pilots honestly account for how long a flight takes. You have to include your flight planning time, as well as door-to-door time when comparing flying somewhere to driving there, for example. I take a lot of flights around 100nm, and quite frankly I don't think in any of them I saved any time over driving when I honestly account for ALL the time the flight took, including planning and preparation. But I still do it because I love to fly. I figure that will change when I start flying longer distances. |
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