![]() |
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 |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Anyone have a rough idea of the amount to budget to earn a glider
certificate? The glider training closest to me appears to be at this club: http://www.kpflight.com/coburg.htm |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 6, 8:34*pm, Jim Logajan wrote:
Anyone have a rough idea of the amount to budget to earn a glider certificate? The glider training closest to me appears to be at this club: http://www.kpflight.com/coburg.htm I strongly suggest you talk to the club members. Costs vary wildly between different clubs. It probably cost me somewhere near $2,500.00. I didn't start until I was in my late 40's. Younger people generally pick it up more quickly. It took 17 hours, roughly 36 flights, before I soloed, and something near 50 more flights (mostly solo) before my instructor insisted I take my check ride and get my ticket. I was a pretty 'slow' student. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jim Logajan" wrote in message .. . wrote: For the record, here's my background: I'm 52, have essentially no previous experience (Okay, I did have a 3rd class medical and student pilot certificate in 1991, but while I passed ground school I got almost no stick time! Mark it up to "life happened".) I started out as an ab-initio student glider pilot at about that age. I was not/am not a natural pilot. Learning to fly a glider was one of the hardest and most satisfying things I have ever done. I found learning the tow to be the hardest part, and that is one of the first things you need to do. There were times when I honestly expected my CFI to gently tell me to find another hobby. After I finally passed my checkride, I kept learning. I even got my Commercial and CFIG and then spent a few years as a part-time glider rides pilot & flight instructor. If you have the desire, go for it! That said, don't expect it to be quick or easy at your age, but you can expect a continuous stream of satisfying experiences as you finally overcome each obstacle on the path to your certificate. Since I am self-employed I could probably dedicate a concentrated effort for two to three weeks. But I suspect the trick to making that happen would be finding a quiet zone between work projects (I find it tough to put off clients) that also coincided with presumable good weather and instructor availability. Why rush it? Take the time to do things right and savor the entire process. You are only a new student pilot once. Oh yes, also take all of the time you need to absorb the knowledge and experiences necessary to fly safely. Flight training is not a race. Vaughn |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Anyone have a rough idea of the amount to budget to earn a glider certificate? The glider training closest to me appears to be at this club: http://www.kpflight.com/coburg.htm simply, it will cost you at least $2000 In detail, you added you were married, so $4000, after equal payback to the one who cannot be argued with. In fact, you will get to the point when you want your own glider, after having happily spent tens of thousands on: Fuel and vehicle expenses to and from your club accomodation expenses whilst flying, quadruple those costs for the wife to accompany you beer and food expenses for yourself, your crew and your new friends better sunglasses, hats, shoes and clothes books, maps, PDAs, software and upgrades tow fees, tug pilots beer bribe money for officials at contests donations to the club to support newbies after you Yep, tens of thousands of dollars but you will spend it happily, and by then, gliders will be even better, and even more expensive On the up side, when you are rugged up by the day nurse and sipping your tea with your new mates, all in wheelchairs at the wrinkly home, some 40 years away, one of your comrades will bring up a long conversation about how they had always wanted to try gliding. You will smile, add your many hours of interesting experience in gliders to the conversation but they wont ever be able to understand. Not ever, their option has passed and words alone cannot explain our sport You alone will have done it, you alone went the extra step. You will be the most content person in the conversation. It cost you tens of thousands, you will find the money, trust me. The cost is not the problem, the lack of time is. You have to balance your spare time with the ones you love, your other passions and true relaxation. One day, like everyone, you will die. At that time, you will have not done enough gliding bagger |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant!
I have a smile on my face from spending yesterday evening with my new flight computer on the dining room table. Experimenting with loading it up with waypoints and airspace and driving it around a task with my laptop. I will have that grin all day and none of my work colleagues will have the slightest inkling of why and where I have been in my imagination already before I go and do it for real. You are right, there is never enough time. Gavin At 23:55 08 June 2008, bagmaker wrote: - Anyone have a rough idea of the amount to budget to earn a glider certificate? The glider training closest to me appears to be at this club: http://www.kpflight.com/coburg.htm- simply, it will cost you at least $2000 In detail, you added you were married, so $4000, after equal payback to the one who cannot be argued with. In fact, you will get to the point when you want your own glider, after having happily spent tens of thousands on: Fuel and vehicle expenses to and from your club accomodation expenses whilst flying, quadruple those costs for the wife to accompany you beer and food expenses for yourself, your crew and your new friends better sunglasses, hats, shoes and clothes books, maps, PDAs, software and upgrades tow fees, tug pilots beer bribe money for officials at contests donations to the club to support newbies after you Yep, tens of thousands of dollars but you will spend it happily, and by then, gliders will be even better, and even more expensive On the up side, when you are rugged up by the day nurse and sipping your tea with your new mates, all in wheelchairs at the wrinkly home, some 40 years away, one of your comrades will bring up a long conversation about how they had always wanted to try gliding. You will smile, add your many hours of interesting experience in gliders to the conversation but they wont ever be able to understand. Not ever, their option has passed and words alone cannot explain our sport You alone will have done it, you alone went the extra step. You will be the most content person in the conversation. It cost you tens of thousands, you will find the money, trust me. The cost is not the problem, the lack of time is. You have to balance your spare time with the ones you love, your other passions and true relaxation. One day, like everyone, you will die. At that time, you will have not done enough gliding bagger -- bagmaker |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim Logajan wrote:
Anyone have a rough idea of the amount to budget to earn a glider certificate? You're a student for only a short period of your gliding career and in many clubs, there is no additional charge for instruction. So, your real question (IMHO) should be "what does it cost to participate in soaring?". That said, James's ball park estimate of US$2500 is probably a good place to start. Tony V. CFIG http://home.comcast.net/~verhulst/SOARING |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tony Verhulst" wrote in message . .. ... your real question (IMHO) should be "what does it cost to participate in soaring?". Well said! Since much of soaring is done solo anyhow, and much of your student flying is also solo, the cost to actually earn your certificate is not terribly relevant. Flying is flying...certificate or not, and flying is a wonderful thing. Vaughn (CFIG) |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Vaughn Simon" wrote:
"Tony Verhulst" wrote in message . .. ... your real question (IMHO) should be "what does it cost to participate in soaring?". Well said! Since much of soaring is done solo anyhow, and much of your student flying is also solo, the cost to actually earn your certificate is not terribly relevant. Flying is flying...certificate or not, and flying is a wonderful thing. Yes, I understand the training cost is just part of a continuum of ongoing costs. But I'm assuming (perhaps incorrectly) that I'll be doing more flying in a short span of time than I would once I earn a certificate. So it's a spike in discretionary spending that needs to be planned for. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 07 Jun 2008 13:36:27 -0500, Jim Logajan wrote:
Yes, I understand the training cost is just part of a continuum of ongoing costs. But I'm assuming (perhaps incorrectly) that I'll be doing more flying in a short span of time than I would once I earn a certificate. So it's a spike in discretionary spending that needs to be planned for. You may be surprised. I fly in the UK and learnt here, mainly on a winch, but I think the pre-solo hours are similar to the typical US aero-tow learning experience. The main difference is that winching provides more, shorter flights with a considerably lower launch cost. A side effect is that learning on the winch means you are likely to have more landing practise because you will have done at least twice as many launches and landings as an aero tow student by the time you solo. But I digress: in my pre-solo year (6 months to solo flying weekends, then a month in the club SZD Juniors before thermals stopped for the year) I accumulated about 25 hours flying. For the next four years I averaged around 70 hours per year and assumed that would be my norm. However the last two years have really dropped that figure thanks to changed weather patterns, last year I didn't quite touch 40 hours and this year looks set to be worse. But then, we ARE a weather-dependent game. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | org | Zappa fan & glider pilot |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
A Preliminary Assessment of the Potential Cost and Cost-Effectiveness of Space-Based Weapons. | Mike[_7_] | Naval Aviation | 0 | November 2nd 07 03:18 PM |
EARN CASH WHILE SAVING GAS | Gas Savers | Home Built | 0 | June 29th 06 06:12 PM |
USA Glider Experimental Airworthiness Certificate | charlie foxtrot | Soaring | 4 | April 15th 06 05:04 AM |
Where to earn Glider Rating this fall / winter | [email protected] | General Aviation | 0 | September 5th 05 01:37 AM |
Help me earn my Instrument | Products | 0 | July 16th 03 07:46 AM |