![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article XI5Xe.337964$x96.274400@attbi_s72,
"LCT Paintball" wrote: You have an interesting theory. Why haven't you tried it? Do you have any idea what it costs to tool up and build something like an airplane at an affordable price? If the tooling price tag were 10 billion dollars, and you sold a million airplanes a year, the amortized tooling cost per plane over five years would be $2000. Now just send me a check for ten billion, and I'll get started cranking out affordable planes. |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 13:44:06 -0400, "Gordon Arnaut"
wrote: However, Cessna has all of these costs -- and more --and is still able to price a brand new Skyhawk at $155,000. This is a tremendous value when compared to one of these new LSAs that cost close to $100,000. Without considering whether of not I disagree on the overpricing of the modern crop of (LSA legal) craft in general, one question that comes to mind is how much it costs to make it lighter. Yes, the 172 has 4 seats, but it is 1600+ lbs empty. A new (2 place) Katana is about $135k in basic form and weighs about 1150 empty. The Symphony 160, another 2 place, is 1450 empty. The Liberty XL2 is about 1050 empty; this is a unit convreted to certified from an experimental design. If any of these were rolling in the dough, they would, it seems, lighten them up and get LSA compliant; one ASSUMES they could meet the standards. Maybe making something sturdy and light takes either money or time? Maybe it takes both? Yet somehow Cessna manages to give you all this for a cost of only about 50 percent more than the CT2K. Either Cessna is some kind of manufacturing genius or the LSA is way overpriced. You are literally getting more than twice the airplane for only half again as much cost. What does Cessna/Piper/Diamond/Symphony/Liberty get to leave off to save money? I intuitively feel that if they could make it lighter they would, because weight is the enemy. The only disadvantage that comes to mind is lower wing loading would make it less smooth in flight. All are handmade, a real issue. The ones who have done more to cut costs are the Cirrus folks, and they are no cheaper. While I have no source of even guesses to back this up, look at "18 wheeler" tractors ... MUCH higher volume, and still lots of $$$. I bet the commonly used engines number in the same range as that of Continentals and Lycomings, and that they build MANY more ... how much $? The only creature comforts are in the seat; beyond that, there is little beauty. How about off-road equipment ... that is not inexpensive, either. I _DO_ believe that Toyota (or Ford/GM/Chrysler/VW/Honda/whoever) could build 50,000 a year of a similar model (one production line) at a much lower price. They need to "know" that this market would continue to buy for 5+ years to justify the tooling / plant / design. Recall that automakers kinda look at 50,000 as the minimum number of a product to be profitable. I found one statistic that 48,000,000 per year are built. We (collectively) probably average keeping a new automobile 4 years (I'm guessing) and sell it for 30% of what we bought it for. When we even APPROACH that kind of saturation, costs will fall. Wrecks will go up, repairs will go up, the economy will grow sarcastic mode was on. I think that the prices being charged are fair at this stage of the market cycle. They are probably making FAR less on investment than Intel, or Merck, or Pierre Cardin. I cannot afford one. If I could, I would use it as a toy, not a tool. When some large number of the world's driving population needs one as a tool, the price will drop. I predict that won't happen. I WISH IT WOULD. There is some of the chicken egg syndrome, but I don't think that if a Cessna (172/182/206) could be sold for (40k/50k/70k), that there would be a combined market of 100,000 per year, EVERY YEAR. That's what it would take. Just my 2 cents worth ... well, not worth that. |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Smitty,
Your point about pricing the product -- any product -- at a compelling price point in order to build sales is absolutely true. A good product that is priced to give great value is going to sell a lot, no question. However, personal aviation has some structural limitations -- it is not for everybody and never will be. It will always be a pursuit for a relatively small segment of the population, for a number of reasons -- it is challenging, it is risky and it is expensive (even if prices came down by half it would still be expensive). The personal airplane will never be a car, or even a jet ski or a motorcycle, in terms of sales potential. Which is probably a good thing, considering how many bad drivers and riders and boaters there are -- and how many more bad pilots there would be. (Not that there aren't already). And because there will never be a million personal planes sold, personal aviation will always be something of a cottage industry with the attendant poor value. The best we can hope for is a modest improvement, which is the idea of sportplanes. The idea was that by loosening the regulations, it would be possible to build small airplanes more cheaply, and thereby provide better value and attract new buyers. However, we are seeing just the opposite. The first sportplanes actually give you less for your dollar than the Cessna I mentioned. I cited the Cessna not because it's a great deal by any stretch of the imagination, but because it is still a better value than the new sportplanes -- a lot better value any way you look at it. This is a problem, because the whole idea behind sportplanes was to provide a more compelling value propostion, not less. However, the people making them have taken the marketing approach you see in movie theater snack bars: There is no other place to get popcorn so why not gouge the customer? So you look at a small bag of popcorn that costs eight dollars and you think to yourself, "man that is a gip." And so the large box of popcorn which only costs two bucks more, but is actually about five times bigger, doesn't look so bad in comparison. Sure you're paying ten bucks for a crummy bag of popcorn, but it's better than saving two bucks and getting one fifth the product. It's the same thing here. That $150,000 Skyhawk doesn't look so bad in comparison to a $100,000 putt-putt that is not even one-third the airplane. I bet the Cessna executives must be having a pretty good laugh looking at the prices of some of these planes -- and no doubt shaking their heads. But I agree wholeheartedly with your point that if these outfits building sportplanes were smart, they would take a page out of old Henry's book and price them to move. I do believe that some will eventually wake up to that fact -- the economics are very real and viable, despite some of the comments from those in industry who would have us believe that it is impossible to build a plane for $50,000. It is possible and it will be done. The main stumbling block, regulation, is out of the way now. All that remains is for one smart individual to run with this idea -- perhaps the Henry Ford of sprotplanes is still out there. Regards, Gordon. "Smitty Two" wrote in message news ![]() In article uNZWe.123865$084.68527@attbi_s22, "LCT Paintball" wrote: Go look at a new car lot, and then go look at some new airplanes, and give me ONE reason why an airplane costs ten times as much as a car. Because there are 1000 cars sold for every airplane. The cost of special tooling isn't being absorbed by enough volume. Volume, my ass. I'll go back to Henry Ford again. The Model T was priced at $825 when it was introduced in 1908. He continually cut prices. By 1916, the cars sold for $345. Every time he cut prices, more people could afford cars, and his volume went up. Every time his profit per car went down, his total profit went up. It was his pricing policies that made him the largest carmaker in the world. And his accountants, investors, competitors, and everyone else thought he was crazy. Yeah, sure. That's the real world. You can't wait for increased volume to decrease prices. You have to work it the other way around. People here are saying Skyhawks are a bargain at $150,000? What percentage of Americans can buy a toy of that magnitude? Price them as though you were going to sell a million a year, and by god, you will. Try selling a product to Home Depot, as I've done. They RETAIL stuff for less than their competition can buy it for. Why? Volume. You don't tell them what your product costs, they tell you what they'll pay. Go to Continental and Lycoming and tell them you want to buy a million airplane engines per year, but you need the price to be $6500. Ask them which one of them wants the contract. They'll probably both come back begging to undercut that target. Jeez, I've gotten myself all worked up again. I guess I better get a small glass of wine and go back out to the shop and squeeze a few rivets on the RV. |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dang,
Let me know the metalworking equipment you are paying 250,000 bucks for. A decent brake is around 4000, a nice shear 4000-5000. Yes you could spend some more, or if you were frugile alittle less. To build something like a Cub or Champ you don't need 250,000 bucks of metal working equipment. However if you want to spend that kind of money in your metalshop I'd love to come work for you ![]() spend some bucks on things like water jet cutters or what have you..but they could not pay for themselves unless you were selling airplanes like hotcakes. So really something like that is something you buy when you know you have the biz going strong, and not really a start up cost. Some places I worked had shrinkers /stretchers, and a English Wheel was a luxury. Of course working on airliners they definitely had CNC and such to cut parts from...but that is not a sport plane ![]() built very very well with basic sheet metal tools. The high dollar stuff would be a waste of money unless you needed production speed of an automobile assembly line. I've never built a plastic injection mold, but I've built airplanes ![]() Patrick student SP aircraft structural mech "LCT Paintball" wrote in message news:XI5Xe.337964$x96.274400@attbi_s72... I build plastic injection molds for a living. Although prices vary considerably with the complexity of the part, figure $40,000 as an average price for an injection mold. Multiply that times the number of parts in an airplane. Don't forget that the right side is different than the left side of the plane. Now, figure around $250,000 for each piece of metal working equipment to build the metal parts. Now, you've just about gotten started making the individual parts of the plane. I guess you can figure out what it will cost to build the assembly line now. |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"Kyle Boatright" wrote: Your analogy is off-base. The Model T offered more practical transportation than the horse and buggy, and transportation is a must have. A LSA, regardless of price, is a toy, not practical transportation. You won't sell a million, and I think 5,000 a year will be a stretch if the cost is $50k. That's the real world. You can't wait for increased volume to decrease prices. You have to work it the other way around. People here are saying Skyhawks are a bargain at $150,000? What percentage of Americans can buy a toy of that magnitude? Price them as though you were going to sell a million a year, and by god, you will. Don't think so. You could give 'em away and there are not enough people interested in aviation to take 'em all. The Model T sold because Henry Ford made it affordable, and sold it. No one was driving around in a horse and buggy saying, "jeez, I sure wish someone would invent a car." The T wasn't exactly a Toyota Avalon, either. You actually had to get dirty and maintain and fix the damn thing on a regular basis. The roads sucked. The whole automobile infrastructure hadn't been built. There weren't a bunch of gas stations, and Sears stores weren't selling tires and Die Hards. I'd say the T was more of a novelty toy than "practical transportation" when it was introduced. Still he sold a half million $400 cars per year at a time when his laborers were earning $2.50/day, and the US population was only 100,000,000. Make airplanes actually affordable to someone other than the great- grandson of a robber baron, and people will get interested. The boating industry sells close to a million boats annually, and they aren't any less of a toy than an airplane. And despite the Moller fiasco, some certifiably sane real people really believe that airplanes *will* become practical means of personal transportation some day. But not at 150k per copy. |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
George,
The sportplanes are so light because it costs less to build with less material. Any material costs money, including aircraft aluminum, composites, wood, steel tube, fabric, or anything else. And if you have more material you also have more work in shaping and fitting it. There is no magic in this. None of the sportplane makers set out to take a 2000 pound plane and whittle it down to a 1000 pound plane. They started out trying to make a small basic plane. By design, such an airplane can be very light. To assume that building light actually costs more is wrong. It weighs less because you are getting a lot less airplane. Regards, Gordon. "GeorgeB" wrote in message ... On Sat, 17 Sep 2005 13:44:06 -0400, "Gordon Arnaut" wrote: However, Cessna has all of these costs -- and more --and is still able to price a brand new Skyhawk at $155,000. This is a tremendous value when compared to one of these new LSAs that cost close to $100,000. Without considering whether of not I disagree on the overpricing of the modern crop of (LSA legal) craft in general, one question that comes to mind is how much it costs to make it lighter. Yes, the 172 has 4 seats, but it is 1600+ lbs empty. A new (2 place) Katana is about $135k in basic form and weighs about 1150 empty. The Symphony 160, another 2 place, is 1450 empty. The Liberty XL2 is about 1050 empty; this is a unit convreted to certified from an experimental design. If any of these were rolling in the dough, they would, it seems, lighten them up and get LSA compliant; one ASSUMES they could meet the standards. Maybe making something sturdy and light takes either money or time? Maybe it takes both? Yet somehow Cessna manages to give you all this for a cost of only about 50 percent more than the CT2K. Either Cessna is some kind of manufacturing genius or the LSA is way overpriced. You are literally getting more than twice the airplane for only half again as much cost. What does Cessna/Piper/Diamond/Symphony/Liberty get to leave off to save money? I intuitively feel that if they could make it lighter they would, because weight is the enemy. The only disadvantage that comes to mind is lower wing loading would make it less smooth in flight. All are handmade, a real issue. The ones who have done more to cut costs are the Cirrus folks, and they are no cheaper. While I have no source of even guesses to back this up, look at "18 wheeler" tractors ... MUCH higher volume, and still lots of $$$. I bet the commonly used engines number in the same range as that of Continentals and Lycomings, and that they build MANY more ... how much $? The only creature comforts are in the seat; beyond that, there is little beauty. How about off-road equipment ... that is not inexpensive, either. I _DO_ believe that Toyota (or Ford/GM/Chrysler/VW/Honda/whoever) could build 50,000 a year of a similar model (one production line) at a much lower price. They need to "know" that this market would continue to buy for 5+ years to justify the tooling / plant / design. Recall that automakers kinda look at 50,000 as the minimum number of a product to be profitable. I found one statistic that 48,000,000 per year are built. We (collectively) probably average keeping a new automobile 4 years (I'm guessing) and sell it for 30% of what we bought it for. When we even APPROACH that kind of saturation, costs will fall. Wrecks will go up, repairs will go up, the economy will grow sarcastic mode was on. I think that the prices being charged are fair at this stage of the market cycle. They are probably making FAR less on investment than Intel, or Merck, or Pierre Cardin. I cannot afford one. If I could, I would use it as a toy, not a tool. When some large number of the world's driving population needs one as a tool, the price will drop. I predict that won't happen. I WISH IT WOULD. There is some of the chicken egg syndrome, but I don't think that if a Cessna (172/182/206) could be sold for (40k/50k/70k), that there would be a combined market of 100,000 per year, EVERY YEAR. That's what it would take. Just my 2 cents worth ... well, not worth that. |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Gordon Arnaut wrote:
It seems a lot of people have been writing letters to Kitplanes magazine complaining about the unexpectedly steep prices of the new crop of factory-built sportplanes. So the editor of that publication decided to respond. His message: Get used to it. This really infuriated me, not only because the commentary lacked any substance about why prices are what they appear to be, but also because this is another example of the shameless pandering to advertisers, or potential advertisers. Pandering to advertisers, eh? Did you go into work last week and tell your boss that he was a dip**** for such-n-such a decision? Naw, I guess your pandering is acceptable then. The "yes, boss" attitude toward industry is nothing new in the enthusiast magazine sector of course (cars, bikes, what have you), but it is really plumbing new lows lately. Flying, which used to be a decent rag under Dick Collins, has zero integrity nowadays. A couple of years ago I read with interest as Collins commented pointedly about the spate of deadly crashes in Cirrus airplanes. He questioned whether the airplane was dangerous in spins since it had not been certifed for such -- the parachute being considered as a kind of substitute by regulators, apparently. I silently applauded Collins' integrity, but remember thinking that such an editorial faux pas as daring to criticize an advertiser -- even on something as crucial as safety -- would not go unpunished. I was right. The very next month's issue did not have an ad from Cirrus, which had been advertising every month until the Collins commentary. Way to go. No need to speak up when someone does the right thing, now is there? How come you didn't volunteer to replace the lost add revenue while you were remaining silent? In fact it was quite a few months until the Cirrus ads reappeared in that august publication -- with the spineless J. MacLellan , taking every possible opportunity to gladhand Cirrus in the meantime, with all kinds of glowing write-ups, cover photos, you name it. I guess the grovelling finally paid off, and Cirrus decided to start writing checks to Flying again. This is the tragi-comic state of "journalism" in the enthusiast magazine sector. The bottom line is that the reader counts for zero, while the advertiser is king. And issues like safety and price-gouging are swept under the carpet by editorial apologists. Bzzt! Wrong. The reader accounts for about $4.50 per magazine. That just barely will cover the cost of printing...maybe. The major revenue, the money that will keep the lights on, comes from....you guessed it...the advertisers!!! And guess, what...I don't give money to people who say bad things about me. And I don't ask that from others. You could have kept Flying honest if you were willing to open your checkbook. But of course, as is all to typical now days, you expect others to sacrifice to coddle you. Want a magazine that tells the truth and isn't worried about advertisers (cause they don't have any), the subscribe to "Consumer Reports". Now back to the issue about the high cost of sportplanes. What should have been said in this "editorial" but wasn't is that the prices are too high. Way too high in fact. Frankly I don't think this price level will hold. I think there is a real opportunity for enterprising individuals to jump in and build a nice little sportplane at the $50,000 price point. Only then will this category take off. If we don't see prices come down to this level, sportplanes will turn out to be nothing but a marginal part of the aviation scene. Maybe you can be that enterprising individual that is so much smarter than all the guys-n-gals that are giving it their all, Gordon. Personally, I've been building my Delta for over 3yrs now, in conditions not far removed from the Allegro's that are being put together down in Sanford. If I was expecting to feed and house my family from building airplanes, I'd have to look at $100K as fairly minimal. Furthermore, sportsplanes will be a marginal part of the aviation scene, even if the planes were available for $25k. You don't make any money with a light plane. They can't even be used as a serious mode of transportation with most pilots, because the weather can rise up at any time and destroy the best laid plans. Very few people could even use one to get to work. They are toys, and they will always be toys until someone finds a way to make money with them other than building and selling them or giving flight training. That keeps the market volume low, which drives the price up. So, get over the price-gouging bull, until your ready to introduce the Arnaut CloudWunker costing less than an average family sedan. If you don't like the prices of the products of offering to you, don't buy it. -- This is by far the hardest lesson about freedom. It goes against instinct, and morality, to just sit back and watch people make mistakes. We want to help them, which means control them and their decisions, but in doing so we actually hurt them (and ourselves)." |
#38
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Would you really want as many planes flying as cars are driving? Do you
really want the plane to be so affordable that anyone can get one and not care about it like a cheap car? Personaly, I'd like to keep the price up there so the people who own a plane keeps it up to higher standards. I really don't like the idea of the LSA, although good idea for some, I think your going to start to see planes falling out of the sky due to lack of experience. But if you really want to know why the prices are so high, build one and then try to sell it. Lou |
#39
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 18 Sep 2005 05:44:24 GMT, Ernest Christley
wrote: This is the tragi-comic state of "journalism" in the enthusiast magazine sector. The bottom line is that the reader counts for zero, while the advertiser is king. And issues like safety and price-gouging are swept under the carpet by editorial apologists. Bzzt! Wrong. The reader accounts for about $4.50 per magazine. That just barely will cover the cost of printing...maybe. The major revenue, the money that will keep the lights on, comes from....you guessed it...the advertisers!!! And guess, what...I don't give money to people who say bad things about me. And I don't ask that from others. You could have kept Flying honest if you were willing to open your checkbook. But of course, as is all to typical now days, you expect others to sacrifice to coddle you. This is bordering on troll territotory, but I will bite. I think he expects what everyone else expects. An honest review. Anything less than that is just marketing. I have a susbscrition to Flying, but I'll be damned if I am going to buy the magazine if it's just a schill for the aviation comanpies. There are plenty of "Marketing" mags out there for many industries. All they are is marketing slicks and maybe an occasional fluff article. They beg you to get a free subscribtion so their demos are better and advertising revenue goes up. That not what I expect from Flying. If I pay, I expect information. The thing you forget about in you money equaiton. Advertising pays the bills, but without subscribers, their advertising doesn't bring in squat. I used to subscribe to a SCUBA magazine that was pretty good in the past, but then it really started regurgitating the marketing slicks that the regulator companies produced. So I stopped subscribing. They didn't miss me perhaps but that rag is known in the industry as a hack magazine and I think that the only people that subscribe are newbies that don't know any better. Their revenue is currently suffereing. Want a magazine that tells the truth and isn't worried about advertisers (cause they don't have any), the subscribe to "Consumer Reports". Good magazine. Doesn't have a lot to do with aviation. Maybe you can be that enterprising individual that is so much smarter than all the guys-n-gals that are giving it their all, Gordon. Personally, I've been building my Delta for over 3yrs now, in conditions not far removed from the Allegro's that are being put together down in Sanford. If I was expecting to feed and house my family from building airplanes, I'd have to look at $100K as fairly minimal. Hope your plane turns out well. And I would expect that most of your equipment is idle while you are working on one particular part. This is called inefficiency of production. I'm betting Allegro is using an assembly line concept that is a little more efficient with their resources. If not, than that's the problem. Furthermore, sportsplanes will be a marginal part of the aviation scene, even if the planes were available for $25k. You don't make any money with a light plane. They can't even be used as a serious mode of transportation with most pilots, because the weather can rise up at any time and destroy the best laid plans. Very few people could even use one to get to work. They are toys, and they will always be toys until someone finds a way to make money with them other than building and selling them or giving flight training. That keeps the market volume low, which drives the price up. Agreed, but even toys have to reasonably priced. So, get over the price-gouging bull, until your ready to introduce the Arnaut CloudWunker costing less than an average family sedan. If you don't like the prices of the products of offering to you, don't buy it. He isn't buying. That's the point. Jim http://www.unconventional-wisdom.org |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Along the lines of my previous posting regarding the theoretical base
price of any LSA plane produced commercially, I've provided the following numbers for comparison. Note that the single biggest cost is labor ( even at the ridiculously low rate I specified): Airframe + avionics + engine + labor kit basic O235 20000 + 4000 + 15000 + ( 500 * 45 ) = 61500 Note that labor costs 22500 and that the above number doesn't specify any profit or liability insurance. Adding these two in easily puts the base price over $80.00. Of particular note, if the quantity of labor could be reduced by half on both the production of the airframe parts and assembly, you might conceivably squeeze out 20K from the base price. I'm not sure if your average LSA/kit manufacturer is up to the task of tackling all the required process/materials/FEA engineering necessary to realise those savings, but I have a feeling a community effort might succeed if the information were pooled. I've seen other kit manufacturers attempt to recover these costs the easy way over the last few years by moving operations to places such as south america or south east asia. This however, seems to me to be a short sighted way to recover assembly costs, particularly with the costs of oil these days. If only these manufacturers would spend the money they are going to spend on moving operations off shore on better engineered products, then not only would we have better airplanes, but they would be made at home. Evan Carew |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Washington DC airspace closing for good? | tony roberts | Piloting | 153 | August 11th 05 12:56 AM |
Enjoy High Quality incredible low cost PC-to-phone and broadband phone services | John | Home Built | 0 | May 19th 05 02:58 PM |
Boeing Boondoggle | Larry Dighera | Military Aviation | 77 | September 15th 04 02:39 AM |
Fwd: [BD4] Source of HIGH CHTs on O-320 and O-360 FOUND! | Bruce A. Frank | Home Built | 1 | July 4th 04 07:28 PM |
Could it happen he The High Cost of Operating in Europe | Larry Dighera | Piloting | 5 | July 14th 03 02:34 AM |