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Question on buying a plane

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Old 19th Jun 2010, 05:33
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Question on buying a plane

What are peoples views on purchasing an aircraft. I am not sying I am currently in the financial position to do this, but for a touring aircraft, what do you think twin or single. For eg: Piper Meridian or a Baron

For a private owner do you think the single is safer and get yourself in less trouble than flying a twin.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 05:36
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Singles are cheaper.... and I think a Caravan would be a great self-contained touring aircraft... room down the back for a bed, too, if you take out some seats...
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 06:00
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Well it all depends on what you need it for. i.e. how far you want to fly, how many you want to carry, and, more importantly, how much coin you have to burn.
I wanted a 6 seater with good range for VFR trips that wouldnt need a sponsership from OPEC so I got a 210 with long range tanks. Its not a bad beast. You have to decide if you want to burn twice the gas for not a great deal more speed in a Baron. Im looking to put a TSIO550 in my 210, then i'll have a pretty fast, pretty economical 6 seater.
But if you are talking Meridian's you are in a slightly higher league than anything I'll ever fly.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 07:34
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...not sying I am currently in the financial position to do this...
Buying an aircraft is the cheapest part.....
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 07:36
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Owning an aircraft is like a bacon and egg sandwich.

The Chook is involved, but the Pig is committed.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 08:18
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Buying an aircraft is the cheapest part.....
Words of wisdom from the Wheel!

I used to joke that when I won Gold Lotto, it was off to Tolouse to pick up the TBM 700/850! The reality, however, is that feeding such a beast would soon gobble up what was left of the big win - and I would be grounded.

Unless you have a tax-deductible reason to fly or are seriously independently wealthy, it is hard to see the average person being able to afford much beyond a substantial home built of the RV variety or one of the common GA 2 - 6 seat singles.

GA twins may look cool - but think 2 x C210 or Bonanzas flying in formation. Very hard to justify, even from a safety point of view, unless you are doing a lot of night flying or long over-water legs.

Australia supposedly missed the GFC, but it is interesting to reflect on the number of private twins and singles that have departed my home aerodrome since the GFC kicked.

Meridians, Caravans, P12s and TBMs are fun to dream about, but the only people I know who operate them privately have very substantial businesses backing their operation.

The FTDK used to share a hangar with a lovely Baron and the ramp with a couple of very nice Bonanzas - but is now the only one left!

Dr
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 09:02
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yes, buying an aircraft is expensive! i have recently bought my second, both Raaus registered, one factory built and one Kit built,
yes its very expensive, especially with hangerage in the sydney region now being the biggest ongoing cost,

but the satisfaction of opening the hangar doors dragging Your aircraft out into the sunlight, and lifting off the runway and taking up heading to a far off destination.... that is priceless.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 09:35
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Essuming your a rational person and without a bottomless pool of money to draw on and don't wish to purchace your own aircraft fractional ownership may be the go.
You can find plenty of flying syndicates in the av trader i know of at least 3 at the moment on the east coast.
One in particular is $3500 a share and enables you to hire a arrow for $140 an hour.
The advantages of being in a syndicate are endless.....

You genrally have better availability than you'd find at a school or club
Having completed the "IM SAFE " checklist in the back of your VFG you take your key and go ( NO RIP OFF CFI demanding you get a check ride before hire.
Pride of ownership and insight into whats involved in operating aircraft.
You can still hire other aircraft if you get bored with it after a while ( its not like a marrige)
Downsides include.....

Having to contribute cash in an emergency i.e early engine
Having to find a suitable buyer for your share to get out ( can take a long time )

Anyhow Billy its all food for thought im confident you'll make the right decision.
Just be aware that if you were thinking about going it alone and want to base and insure 4 seater GA lighty at a former GAAP field you would be looking at around $14000 p.a before the prop even swings.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 09:54
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You should have come to Warnervale to the un-reserved Auction yesterday.

1978 BEECHCRAFT ME-26 DUCHESS VH-CLE Item #6281-1 Qty : 1Item Type : General Description / Item Information1978 BEECHCRAFT ME-26 DUCHESS AIRCRAFT REGD:VH-CLE TOTAL AIRFRAME HOURS: 9029HOURS. ENGINE 1 TOTAL TIME: 1950 HOURS (SHOWING) TIME SINCE OVERHAUL 1950 HOURS ENGINE 2 TOTAL TIME: 1950 HOURS (SHOWING) TIME SINCE OVERHAUL 1950 HOURS PROP HOURS: PROP 1 HARTZELL TIME SINCE OVERHAUL 1950 HOURS PROP 2 HARTZELL TIME SINCE OVERHAUL 1950 HOURS AVIONICS: ADF KING KR87 AUTOPILOTS CENTURY III DME KING KN63 GPS COMM GARMIN GNS430 MARKER BEACON KING KMA24 NAV COMM KING KY97A CURRENT MAINTENANCE RELEASE


Sold for $25k.

It even had a GNS430 and they are worth US$10k !

A mate was saying we could have bought it for $25k'ish, sold the engines to some RV builders, sold the GNS430, parted out the rest, put it on a pole outside our local airport and walked away with a few grand!


PS: The Buccaneer sold for $45k if I'm not mistaken.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 09:58
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Thanks everyone. It is still a dream at this stage, but from a safety point of view I didn't mean a twin was any safer. I actually thought if you are not flying it every week, then a single might be safer - engine fails you glide and try not to hit anything, with a twin, engine fails, try and fly on one engine, but if your are not quick enough you have a world of trouble (spin, spin, spin).

Also think I might have been a bit naive about the operating costs.

Cheers
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 10:00
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Whereas a two seat RAA type could run as cheap as maybe $2500 a year fixed costs and maybe $60 an hour for the flying budget. That's what I allow and so far it's worked out fine, even allowing for a few unscheduled items along the way like new exhaust mufflers and a radio fritzing itself. As long as I disregard having money that could be earning interest tied up in a toy. Of course that money could be on the sharemarket....I will enjoy the toy, thank you. Cost of ownership also depends very heavily on whether you can do basic maintenance, which is allowed under RAA but not so easy with a VH rego unless you get a really understanding LAME on side. You don't have to build one to own RAA rego - plenty for sale in the RA magazine, often with only a few hundred hours total time.
Private aircraft owners tend to do less than 50 hours a year, so that fixed cost quoted above of $14,000 for a 4 seater is one helluva price to pay for the satisfaction of ownership. Then there's the AVGAS whereas most RA machines will run on 98 octane from your local servo. Not too many VH machines around will TAS at 100 knots burning 15 litres an hour, either.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 10:07
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Just for fun, if I had the money, and i CERTAINLY DON'T, but if I could afford a Cessna 208, does anyone have ball park operating figures.

Thanks
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 10:46
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For private ops it will cost you a minimum $1200 per hour and thats if you use it a bit I reckon.

Dick Smith should be able to answer that for you.

Forkie has summed it up well. Even an RV10 that gets lots of use and fixed costs split 50/50 will cost you about $175/hr and thats based on 100hrs a year. Most private folk do not do that or even half that.

I did manage 175hrs this last year.

If you are a low to moderate user....join an aero club and rent it. If it Flies Floats or F#### rent it...cheaper by the hour....or minute!
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 10:59
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Even a Jabiru could cost you near $130 an hour considering the loss of interest on the outlay including hangar and insurance etc.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 19:18
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"...but if I could afford a Cessna 208, does anyone have ball park operating figures."
Figure on $1,000 per hour at 1,000 hours per annum. Reduce the annual hours and the hourly cost increases proportionally.

VH-XXX. Looking at that Dutchess - and I don't know engine and prop TBO - it has to cost over $130K with OH engines and props.

Having owned seven or eight aircraft over many years, I can say with total confidence that the two happiest days of your life will be the day you buy the aircraft and the day you sell it! I've also owned seven yachts and five sports cars, the rest of my wages I spent foolishly.

My advice if you think you would like to buy an aircraft, take a cold shower, a couple of BEX and a long lie down! If the urge is still there, burn a $100 bill and if you find that enjoyable, go buy your aircraft.

Renting someone else's financial woes is still the cheapest option!
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 22:18
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igure on $1,000 per hour at 1,000 hours per annum. Reduce the annual hours and the hourly cost increases proportionally.
I am quite curious as to the method people use to calculate an ideal utilization of aircraft vs. cost. (if this is too much of a thread drift I'm more than happy to start another)

Obviously there are fixed costs (hanger, insurance etc) and the costs involved with standard servicing such as your 100 hourly, oil, incidentals, replacement of an engine and fuel which is slightly variable but can be easily calculated non the less.

How does one work out the good average mean of running the plane?

Obviously if the aircraft is under utilized the fixed costs hit your hourly rate considerably, but if it's over utilized (if there is such a thing) then one would assume the only factors that change are your running costs but they would be the same.

i.e. 1000 hours a year = 10x 100 hourly's and 50% of your engine life.
1500 = 15x 100 hourly's and 75% of your engine life, plus all incidentals and operational costs of course.
Or is it the fact that a major service will take the aircraft offline for x weeks which puts you behind the curve?
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 22:45
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What does the damage in both GA and RAA is when something abnormal comes along and income is lost. Prop strikes can be frequent and for the dumbest of reasons, wheels ups (but in a remote location) etc and the potential massive income loss around that, insurance gaps, transport, paying wages etc. Something that also gets you is stuff that breaks. It only takes a dead battery at $500 or a failed AH and DG on top of a 100 hourly tha makes you wish you could do overtime. Those that think that the operator getting $100 an hour dry for their light single is a good thing should think again. Just think to replace a $1800 TSO'ed AH is not just 18 hours flying, it's a lot more in reality, considering tax etc.
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Old 19th Jun 2010, 22:55
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VH-XXX. Looking at that Dutchess - and I don't know engine and prop TBO - it has to cost over $130K with OH engines and props.
absolutely tail wheel, they'd have to be close to $50k per rebuild youd assume plus props which would surely be out of time. Best bet for that aircraft would be on condition operation for a private owner.
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Old 20th Jun 2010, 00:11
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I have had the Bo out of the air for 2-3 months at a time with maintenance issues. Lost revenue would wipe you out if you were relying on that to pay the bills.

Dr
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Old 20th Jun 2010, 02:22
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If you are flying for fun you guys really need to head out to a Gliding field!
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