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Cheapest Club (was Best Gliding Club Website)



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 12th 03, 08:42 AM
Clint
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Default Cheapest Club (was Best Gliding Club Website)

There are lots of excellent gliding club websites and most of them
give an indication of the rates for flying. It struck me that the
Goldfields Gliding Club must have the cheapest rates currently
anywhere in the world. Entry fee is about $14, annual membership is
around $60, a winch launch costs less than $3 and an minute is $0.14
(including K7, K13, ASK 21, ASK 23, ASW 19 and ASW 20). Instruction is
by an instructors panel which includes national team members and world
record holders and is provided free of charge. The club owns its own
airfield with hangerage available for private gliders for $12/month
(thank goodness I don't have to rig my LAK every time I want to fly).
The club has no dept and we try to keep the rates as affordable for as
many people as possible.

Couple these rates to some of the best thermal conditions around with
masses of large, flat fields and it feels as if I fly at the best club
in the world.

Clinton
LAK 12
  #2  
Old November 12th 03, 04:14 PM
Andreas Maurer
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On 12 Nov 2003 00:42:29 -0800, (Clint) wrote:

There are lots of excellent gliding club websites and most of them
give an indication of the rates for flying. It struck me that the
Goldfields Gliding Club must have the cheapest rates currently
anywhere in the world. Entry fee is about $14, annual membership is
around $60, a winch launch costs less than $3 and an minute is $0.14
(including K7, K13, ASK 21, ASK 23, ASW 19 and ASW 20). Instruction is
by an instructors panel which includes national team members and world
record holders and is provided free of charge. The club owns its own
airfield with hangerage available for private gliders for $12/month
(thank goodness I don't have to rig my LAK every time I want to fly).
The club has no dept and we try to keep the rates as affordable for as
many people as possible.


$0.14 per minute... makes $8.40 per hour.
This translates into $420 per year for 50 hours. Add $60 for the
annual fee and, say, $175 for about 70 winch launches, you end up at
$655 per year.

Which is about twice the sum you'd have to pay at my club.

In my club any winch launch is free, as well as flying time. All you
have to pay is the anual fee of 128 EUR (64 EUR for students) and a
fee of 255 EUR (for 50 hours) that covers all winch launches and all
flying time.

We have ASK-21, DG-505, Ka-8b, 2*DG-300, ASW-24, ASW-27, Super Dimona,
Robin Remorqueur). We also own our airfield as well as three hangars.
Yes, we can also offer national team members as instructors, and
instruction is for free....

I don't think that my club is an exception for a German gliding club.

Unfortunately our weather can't match yours (half the cloud base -
half the prize... lol).
But you are correct - the examples illustrate welll how a healthy club
can offer a lot for little money.



Bye
Andreas
  #3  
Old November 12th 03, 04:48 PM
Ray Lovinggood
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Andreas didn't tell all of the story: The cheap flying
at his club isn't the only thing included in the price.
The dues also includes a bunch of friendly people
and great food! The folks who work in the club house
kitchen preparing Saturday evening and Sunday noon-day
meals did a terrific job when I was there, and I bet
that tradition has been kept over the years. And,
of course since the club is in Germany, the beer selection
on hand was, and continues to be, first rate! Man,
do I have great memories from my membership in that
club!

At 16:24 12 November 2003, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On 12 Nov 2003 00:42:29 -0800, (Clint)
wrote:

There are lots of excellent gliding club websites and
most of them
give an indication of the rates for flying. It struck
me that the
Goldfields Gliding Club must have the cheapest rates
currently
anywhere in the world. Entry fee is about $14, annual
membership is
around $60, a winch launch costs less than $3 and an
minute is $0.14
(including K7, K13, ASK 21, ASK 23, ASW 19 and ASW
20). Instruction is
by an instructors panel which includes national team
members and world
record holders and is provided free of charge. The
club owns its own
airfield with hangerage available for private gliders
for $12/month
(thank goodness I don't have to rig my LAK every time
I want to fly).
The club has no dept and we try to keep the rates as
affordable for as
many people as possible.


$0.14 per minute... makes $8.40 per hour.
This translates into $420 per year for 50 hours. Add
$60 for the
annual fee and, say, $175 for about 70 winch launches,
you end up at
$655 per year.

Which is about twice the sum you'd have to pay at my
club.

In my club any winch launch is free, as well as flying
time. All you
have to pay is the anual fee of 128 EUR (64 EUR for
students) and a
fee of 255 EUR (for 50 hours) that covers all winch
launches and all
flying time.

We have ASK-21, DG-505, Ka-8b, 2*DG-300, ASW-24, ASW-27,
Super Dimona,
Robin Remorqueur). We also own our airfield as well
as three hangars.
Yes, we can also offer national team members as instructors,
and
instruction is for free....

I don't think that my club is an exception for a German
gliding club.

Unfortunately our weather can't match yours (half the
cloud base -
half the prize... lol).
But you are correct - the examples illustrate welll
how a healthy club
can offer a lot for little money.



Bye
Andreas




  #4  
Old November 13th 03, 12:16 AM
Andreas Maurer
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Default

On 12 Nov 2003 16:48:02 GMT, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:

Andreas didn't tell all of the story: The cheap flying
at his club isn't the only thing included in the price.
The dues also includes a bunch of friendly people
and great food! The folks who work in the club house
kitchen preparing Saturday evening and Sunday noon-day
meals did a terrific job when I was there, and I bet
that tradition has been kept over the years.


Indeed... and I have to admit that I forgot to mention that these
friendly people are active pilots (this is the nasty side of my
club... lol): Anyone has his kitchen duty weekends once or twice per
year (tendency is towards one weekend these days since the club has
grown a lot since you left, Ray. 85 active members compared to 55).

And,
of course since the club is in Germany, the beer selection
on hand was, and continues to be, first rate! Man,
do I have great memories from my membership in that
club!


))))


.... did I already mention that we have more female (and really
pretty!) young pilots than males at the moment?



Bye
Andreas
  #5  
Old November 13th 03, 04:37 AM
F.L. Whiteley
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Posts: n/a
Default


"Andreas Maurer" wrote in message
...
On 12 Nov 2003 16:48:02 GMT, Ray Lovinggood
wrote:

Andreas didn't tell all of the story: The cheap flying
at his club isn't the only thing included in the price.
The dues also includes a bunch of friendly people
and great food! The folks who work in the club house
kitchen preparing Saturday evening and Sunday noon-day
meals did a terrific job when I was there, and I bet
that tradition has been kept over the years.


Indeed... and I have to admit that I forgot to mention that these
friendly people are active pilots (this is the nasty side of my
club... lol): Anyone has his kitchen duty weekends once or twice per
year (tendency is towards one weekend these days since the club has
grown a lot since you left, Ray. 85 active members compared to 55).

And,
of course since the club is in Germany, the beer selection
on hand was, and continues to be, first rate! Man,
do I have great memories from my membership in that
club!


))))


... did I already mention that we have more female (and really
pretty!) young pilots than males at the moment?


Hmmmm, emigration beckons.

Frank


  #6  
Old November 12th 03, 06:50 PM
Janusz Kesik
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Posts: n/a
Default

I did take a look at the rates, and it's affordable, but maybe not the =
cheapest.
Just to compare the rates, here are these from my club in Poland (in US =
Dollars):

Entry fee: None.
Annual membership: 84$
Winch launch: n/a (in most clubs it's below 2$
Tow (400/600m): 6.5$ / 7.5$
Glider time: Free of charge.
Parachute, Barograph: Free of charge.

So, considering a person who flies a lot in club gliders (some 15 =
gliders) it's even cheaper. But, don't be distracted by this. I would =
say the affordability of flying should be measured considering the =
salaries in the region. Then, the South Africans may be in better =
situation.
I would like only to add, that the most clubs in Poland have lower rates =
(for clubs' mebers of course).

Regards,


--=20
Janusz Kesik

visit
www.leszno.pl - home of the www.css-leszno.it.pl


U=BFytkownik Clint w wiadomooci do grup =
dyskusyjnych =
gle.com...
There are lots of excellent gliding club websites and most of them
give an indication of the rates for flying. It struck me that the
Goldfields Gliding Club must have the cheapest rates currently
anywhere in the world. Entry fee is about $14, annual membership is
around $60, a winch launch costs less than $3 and an minute is $0.14
(including K7, K13, ASK 21, ASK 23, ASW 19 and ASW 20). Instruction is
by an instructors panel which includes national team members and world
record holders and is provided free of charge. The club owns its own
airfield with hangerage available for private gliders for $12/month
(thank goodness I don't have to rig my LAK every time I want to fly).
The club has no dept and we try to keep the rates as affordable for as
many people as possible.
=20
Couple these rates to some of the best thermal conditions around with
masses of large, flat fields and it feels as if I fly at the best club
in the world.
=20
Clinton
LAK 12


  #7  
Old November 13th 03, 12:40 AM
Craig Freeman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Janusz Kesik" wrote in message ...
I did take a look at the rates, and it's affordable, but maybe not the
cheapest.
Just to compare the rates, here are these from my club in Poland (in US
Dollars):

Entry fee: None.
Annual membership: 84$
Winch launch: n/a (in most clubs it's below 2$
Tow (400/600m): 6.5$ / 7.5$
Glider time: Free of charge.
Parachute, Barograph: Free of charge.

So, considering a person who flies a lot in club gliders (some 15
gliders) it's even cheaper. But, don't be distracted by this. I would
say the affordability of flying should be measured considering the
salaries in the region. Then, the South Africans may be in better
situation.
I would like only to add, that the most clubs in Poland have lower rates
(for clubs' mebers of course).

Regards,


--
Janusz Kesik

visit
www.leszno.pl - home of the www.css-leszno.it.pl


OK Andreas and Janusz I just gotta know where does the scratch, dough,
frogskins, moolah, change, MONEY come from to purchase all this really,
really nice soaring equipment? Somehow clubs in the Good Ole US of A
don't seem so well stocked with soaring inventory even though by your
standards the dues are outrageously high. Are we comparing apples to
apples here?

Craig-
  #8  
Old November 13th 03, 10:56 AM
Janusz Kesik
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Posts: n/a
Default

In 99% of Polish clubs (some 50 clubs) the equipment has been handed by =
the goverment bodies during the communism era (It's the only nice =
thought I have got on it). There are very few gliders bought after =
1989yr and most of them were funded by municipalities or other goverment =
supported bodies. Just to give the example, the PW-5 in my club was =
bought with the help of the mayor of Czestochowa, or the two PW-6s used =
at Rzeszow were bought by Rzeszow Polytechnic University, which has an =
aviation department. Add to this few modern competition gliders bought =
by the Polish Aeroclub to provide equipment for the National Team (most =
of them fly at Leszno).

Now, the most new registrations of gliders in Poland are privately owned =
gliders, mostly Jantars which are reexported back to Poland from Russia =
or CIS countries in general. They have a good prices and in my club =
there are three Jantars Std. 3 which came back to their home country and =
a LAK-12.

So... You may be right, the apples may differ at least...


--=20
Janusz Kesik

visit
www.leszno.pl - home of the www.css-leszno.it.pl

OK Andreas and Janusz I just gotta know where does the scratch, dough,
frogskins, moolah, change, MONEY come from to purchase all this =

really,
really nice soaring equipment? Somehow clubs in the Good Ole US of A
don't seem so well stocked with soaring inventory even though by your
standards the dues are outrageously high. Are we comparing apples to=20
apples here?
=20
Craig-


  #9  
Old November 13th 03, 05:02 PM
Andreas Maurer
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Posts: n/a
Default

On 12 Nov 2003 16:40:39 -0800, (Craig
Freeman) wrote:

OK Andreas and Janusz I just gotta know where does the scratch, dough,
frogskins, moolah, change, MONEY come from to purchase all this really,
really nice soaring equipment? Somehow clubs in the Good Ole US of A
don't seem so well stocked with soaring inventory even though by your
standards the dues are outrageously high. Are we comparing apples to
apples here?


Good question, Craig.

First of all, we have no professional staff - anything is done on
voluntary basis. Each active member has a schedule of several weekend
duties per year (winch driver, kitchen, instructor, tow pilot, and so
on) and in the winter the active members do ALL the maintenance of
aircraft, club hous and airfield. This is the main advantage of a club
- it saves a lot of money each year. It helps that we have relatively
many active pilots (85 at the moment including student pilots) -
usually between 20 and 30 pilots are there on a given day.

The advantage of this system is clear I guess - on the other hand, you
cannot schedule a flight for a certain time. An active pilot needs to
stay on the airfield for a major part of the day (at least), and
usually has to share a glider with two to three comrades per day.

Plenty of flying is done during the week where you have a glider for
yourself. This is usually cross-country flying, instructing is only
done by scheduled instructors on the weekend (of course, if you find a
willing instructor, you can have an appointment with him anytime).

Very important was the fact that we've been flying on a military
(French Army) training terrain for which we had to pay nearly no rent.


Since 40 years my club has always tried to buy as modern gliders as
possible (the idea was/is to have at least one top-performance glider
for our competition pilots). If you buy a new glider in Germany, you
get significant tax abatements (in the range of 20 percent iirc), and
we usually kept the glider for about 10-14 years. So far we were
always able to sell the glider for more money than we had to pay for
it when it was new (In case of your G-103 Twin 2, we even earned
18.000 DM more when we sold it for 60.000 DM after 13 years in 1995
-we bought it for 42.000 DM, unfortunately the DG-505 to replace it
cost 130.000), and the purchase of the next (new) glider) cost us only
an additional charge minus tax abatement. This system has been working
very well in the past, but the latest generation of gliders (e.g.
ASW-27) is that much more expensive than its predecessor generation
(ASW-20) that this system is probably not going to work anymore in the
future.

At the moment we have an order for a Duo Discus that is going to
complement our fleet (we need more seats since the club has grown a
lot in the recent 15 years - from 55 to 85 active pilots), but we are
not sure yet if we will be able to pay it (we are still paying back
150.000 EUR for our part of the airfield that we bought in 1999). We
could get the AS-22-2 (ASH-25 prototype) for less than half the price
of the new Duo, but so far we are not sure yet what to do.


On the other hand - these days gliders don't wear out anymore. If
necessary, a re-finishing (we are doing this by ourselves) is cheap
(but lots of work) and then the glider is as new again, so it's likely
that gliders will be kept for a longer time (15-17 years at least) in
the future.

Until now if you needed a glider for a competition/training
course/vacation, you did not have to pay for it - all you needed was
to ask the executive board and show some above-average dedication.


The gliders were usually financed by members' loans (members loan the
money, get a little more interest than they'd get on their check
account, yet this interest is a lot lower than the usual bank's
interest for a credit). On the long run this system has proved to be a
lot more effective than saving the money till it's enough to buy a
glider.

Other incomes of the club are rare - few contributions, a little
excess of competitions we hold. Winch, tow plane and club house are
calculated that they pay their own costs, we don't earn money with
them).

Intersting note:
Until perhaps five, six years ago privately owned gliders were
forbidden in my club. We had the fear that members with a private
glider would dedicate their time rather on their own means than
working for the club. These days we have half a dozen of privately
owned gliders, and most of their owners still work very well for the
club, so I expect that we are going to see more privately owned
gliders in the future.


One important factor is the payment: We have a flat rate for (winch
launched) flying. This flat rate of about 255 EUR covers all the costs
for winch launching and flying time. The benefit is simple: It does
not matter if you are doing one launch or ten, if you fly ten minutes
or 5 hours. Fly as often as you like (as the others let you... lol).

This leads to the fact that there's alwas plenty of activity on the
airfield, even if the weather is not exhilarating. And in the
beginning of the year it's already clear how much money is going to be
earned over the year - bad weather (with little flying) will not
result in a loss of income for the club. A safe base for calculations.

Our primary launch system, the winch, is very cheap to operate and
very reliable, so it doesn't matter if our tow plane, the Robin
Remorqeur, is grounded for a week because of maintenance (we do this
by ourselves - takes longer, but costs nearly nothing).

All our gliders have a full physical damage insurance.



These are some basics.
I guess it's clear that the basis of a successful club is one thing -
companionship.
To us this is so important that we express this in the club's name:

DJK-SegelflugGEMEINSCHAFT Landau.
http://www.djk-landau.de





Bye
Andreas
  #10  
Old November 14th 03, 05:22 AM
Bruce Hoult
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In article ,
Andreas Maurer wrote:

On the other hand - these days gliders don't wear out anymore. If
necessary, a re-finishing (we are doing this by ourselves) is cheap
(but lots of work) and then the glider is as new again, so it's likely
that gliders will be kept for a longer time (15-17 years at least) in
the future.


You sound positively rich.

Our club owns six gliders: three two seaters, and three single seaters
(all glass). The two PW-5's are only eight years old, but everything
else (2 x Twin Astir, 1 x Janus, 1 x Std Libelle) is 25 or more years
old, though all but the Libelle have been purchased in the last ten
years.

In fact the vast majority of the privately owned gliders (which far
outnumber the club ones) are also more than the 15-17 years old you
mention.

-- Bruce
 




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