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#21
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![]() Apart from cost, the things that come to my mind are the substantial amount of time required to even begin to fly (hours of flying pale in comparison to hours of instruction and training and exams, at least in the beginning), and the many regulatory hurdles to flying, such as the need for a license, various ratings, a strict medical exam, insurance, and so on. It is a little expensive to learn, I grant you that, but your other concerns are not as serious as you make them out to be. I got my ticket from a standing start in 3 months, by squeezing flying in on weekends and the odd afternoon. Yes, I was fairly committed during that time (although I still had plenty of time for other things), but not obsessive. These regulatory hurdles you speak of are nothing - the medical exam is not strict, the license comes in the mail automatically after you pass the checkride, insurance is easy to organize and many clubs offer it as part of their rates. These days I find it easy to keep up my currency despite the north-eastern weather (and cheap, too, since I can share the costs of flying with my friends who come up for a ride). Overall, flying is a lot more difficult than it should be. While this will not discourage the most fanatic flyers, it considerably narrows the field of potential pilots, and even the fanatically devoted pilots have a vested interest in encouraging other people to fly, as it helps pay for and justify the massive infrastructure upon which all pilots depend. You say flying is more difficult than it should be. What would you suggest? If you could magically swoop in and change things, what would you change? Tom |
#22
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You say flying is more difficult than it should be. What would you
suggest? If you could magically swoop in and change things, what would you change? I would change the "sharing costs" rule, and go back to the original. "A private pilot may share the expenses of a flight with his or her passengers in any mutually agreeable manner." It is important that the flight not be represented (overtly or otherwise) as a commercial or charter flight. So, in the same style as expermental aircraft having to be so labeled, and pilots having to inform passengers on how to buckle and unbuckle the safety belt, pilots should clearly state to the passengers that the flight is not a commercial or charter flight, and is not subject to the safety rules and regulations that govern such flights. I would also reverse the "holding out" ruling. I see nothing wrong with (say) posting on a college ride board that John is willing to fly up to three people to Albion for spring break, in line with other similar postings for car ride sharing. Jose -- Humans are pack animals. Above all things, they have a deep need to follow something, be it a leader, a creed, or a mob. Whosoever fully understands this holds the world in his hands. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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#24
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Jose writes:
I would change the "sharing costs" rule, and go back to the original. "A private pilot may share the expenses of a flight with his or her passengers in any mutually agreeable manner." It is important that the flight not be represented (overtly or otherwise) as a commercial or charter flight. So, in the same style as expermental aircraft having to be so labeled, and pilots having to inform passengers on how to buckle and unbuckle the safety belt, pilots should clearly state to the passengers that the flight is not a commercial or charter flight, and is not subject to the safety rules and regulations that govern such flights. I would also reverse the "holding out" ruling. I see nothing wrong with (say) posting on a college ride board that John is willing to fly up to three people to Albion for spring break, in line with other similar postings for car ride sharing. I think all of these regulations are incredibly anal, and I'm surprised the FAA is even allowed to get away with them. Arguing about angels on the head of a pin helps no one, and it's really not the FAA's business. I don't think anyone would confuse sharing the cost of fuel with a pilot friend with boarding a United Airlines flight for Chicago, just as nobody pithcing in for gas with a friend to drive to the coast would confuse it with a Greyhound bus. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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#26
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BDS writes:
But, if you can be even just a little flexible with your schedule then you certainly can do quite alot with a PPL, and even if you fly strictly VFR. Add an instrument rating and maintain your currency and you greatly extend the utility of your PPL. Still, you can apply a simple test: Which predominates when you fly, the flying itself or the destination? The answer, in the great majority of cases, is the flying itself. Therefore it is not transportation. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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