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What is the true cost of GA?

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What is the true cost of GA?

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Old 23rd Jul 2013, 21:14
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What is the true cost of GA?

Hello.

I started my PPL about 7 years ago and due to financial restraints I had to stop and never had the chance to complete it.

The pleasure of flying is something that I often think about and how good it would be to get back in the left hand seat of the Cessna 150/152 or the PA28. However, before I go down the road of starting the PPL training again, I just have a few questions niggling away.

What is the average cost of owning a share/ renting an aircraft? What advantages does joining a club have? As a Private Pilot what kind of flying do you do? e.g. XC, Aerobatics, pleasure flights sight seeing?

I'm wanting to know from the pilots who fly privately and how they manage to keep the cost low.

Thanks.
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Old 23rd Jul 2013, 21:37
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£2,700 on hiring over the last year. Less than it might normally have been as I was without an income for most of that time, and on occasion just did the odd circuit or two for currency rather than a longer flight.
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Old 23rd Jul 2013, 21:50
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LAA (Permit a/c) Sole owner £16k 5 yrs ago, Insurance £600 yr, hangar £100 per month, mogas fuel 18litres per hr. Permit renewal anually £190. approx maintenance/spares £100 annual. Fly when I like. About as cheap as you will get.
CAA/CofA/Club rental, impossible.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 00:00
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£50 a month and £80 per flying hour, non-equity.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 06:24
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£40 a month, £28 an hour, Ikarus C-42.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 06:28
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£55 per month and £82.50 per tacho hour (so about £70-£75 an hour in real life). C172 no equity group.

Cheapest flying would be with a permit aircraft, if you have the capital for the initial purchase.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 07:26
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Factoring in hangarage, maintenance, permit renewal, fuel etc. 50hrs a year works out around £58 per hour for me.

Selling a share wouldn't bring it down by much and would eat into the 100% availability.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 07:33
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365 days times 24 = 8760 hours per year.
100 hours a year is average to good going privately.
so unused time is about 8660 hours per year.

putting your aeroplane away in a dry hangar for the unused time will more than pay for itself in the reduction in deterioration and corrosion related maintenance issues.

O-200 engine about 23 litres per hour.
O-320 engine about 35 litres per hour.
litres per hour times number of hours times price per litre of fuel = basic flight cost.
add to this the cost of annual maintenance and paperwork.
add to this the air navigation and airfield costs.

add up all these and you have your costs.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 09:41
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£50 a month plus £55 per tacho hour for my Cessna 150 non-equity group
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 10:48
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All included

15 years flying, about 440 hours fixed wing, IMC and Night.
Everything included (training, accessories, maps, membership fees, fuel.....etc) has cost £70K.
Works out at ~ £160/hr.
At present fly a C172 with £120/month fixed and £101/hr.
Possibly soon to change for a cheaper model.
Good luck with your figures.
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 11:15
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£30 per month, £80 per tacho hour, C152 non-equity.

Only downside is the landing fees!
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 13:54
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Just got back from touring France in my Permit aircraft. Total cost for 100h a year is £4200 all in – sole owner. Cheapest option for touring etc 2 up would probably be a Jodel share at around £3k plus £40 an hour and £40 per month.

Rod1
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Old 24th Jul 2013, 20:36
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Thank you for your replies.

Theres a few different quantities of costings. I thought that would be the case depending on the type of aircraft you fly and how you fly it etc.

What is a permit aircraft?

As pointed out that a dry, clean hangar would reduce any depreciation of the aircraft, and therefore would help maintain some form of value. If I was to buy a share in a fixed wing, obviously depending on the hours flown, would it lose value fairly quickly? I'm just thinking in terms of a car, all you need to do is sign your name on the dotted line and you've lost a few hundred perhaps thousands.

Am I right in thinking that once you buy the aircraft/ share the running costs can be relatively reasonable?
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Old 25th Jul 2013, 07:54
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The aircraft I recommended – the Jodel – is a permit aircraft looked after by the LAA;

Welcome to the Light Aircraft Association

Welcome to the Light Aircraft Association

A permit aircraft is restricted to Day VFR, but the running costs are much less than a C of A aircraft. My MCR costs me approximately £10,000 less a year to run than my old C of A machines and it is a much more capable bit of kit.

Rod1
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Old 25th Jul 2013, 09:14
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£45 per month then £102 per hour - Permit to Fly SA Bulldog in a group (with equity so initial share buy in too).

In comparison, Prices - Bulldog Aircraft | Ultimate High charge £255 per hour.

A Permit to Fly aircraft is one which is not suitable for a Certificate of Airworthiness.
Generally they are home builds or older types with no type holder.

As said above, they are pretty much always restricted to Day VFR only and they can't be used for "work" (so you can't hire them from a club).

Most are managed through the LAA.

They are cheaper as they are often much lighter and so use less fuel; the design rules are less strict (which means they are often more modern); most (if not all) maintenance can be done by pilots; they don't have to use certified parts.

Last edited by riverrock83; 25th Jul 2013 at 09:18.
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Old 25th Jul 2013, 09:34
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I've been in two groups recently. The cost depends very much on the aircraft type and what you do.

Now: a Jodel D119, LAA Permit, two seat taildragger, cruises around 80 knots. £50 a month, £50 an hour (including fuel). Hangared in a barn on a farm strip. No baggage space to speak of, so wouldn't go touring in it.
One sixth share cost me £2,000.

Previously: a Piper Arrow (PA28R201), full C of A, cruises around 130 knots. I took it all over Europe. £100 a month, £100 an hour (incl fuel). Parked on the apron at Southend. Now sold. One sixth share cost around £9,000 - and some cash calls for Mode S, 8.33kHz radio, new engine and prop, etc.

You can fly cheaper than that Jodel, and there are some fascinating LAA types around. The decision is whether to own outright or join a group - if there's one locally.
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Old 25th Jul 2013, 11:53
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Until recently it worked out as -
Fixed annual costs: £1,600 (Club membership, trailer parking, glider insurance)
Variable costs: £35 per launch, approx 30 launchs p.a.

Comprised mix of cross-country soaring (flights lasting up to five hours), racing and aerobatics.

Approx 100 hours p.a., so around £27 p/hr. Which shows that gliding can be a less expensive option!
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Old 25th Jul 2013, 21:24
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Jumping off high wall, nil outlay, half second free fall, 120 times day, 2 minutes a day, 12hrs a year giving two days off at Xmas. Cheapest flying there is.
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Old 26th Jul 2013, 06:20
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In 2012, 64.5 tach hours in a Group owned Jodel 1050, hangared at Inverness, cost a total of £4695, including landing charges at Inverness, but not land away charges. Run on mogas, and Group made a good profit towards engine fund etc. LAA Permit aircraft.
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Old 26th Jul 2013, 18:39
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I run my own aircraft, a Permit to Fly Jodel from a farm strip. I do my own maintenance and use the services of an LAA Inspector to sign it off. His cost is a pint of beer and £30

I fly around 100hrs a year and with everything included, it works out at £83.92 per hour. I could reduce this by using MOGAS or shopping around for cheaper AVGAS (I pay £2.24 a litre from my local airfield!!!)

If I did 75hrs/year, the cost would be £94.17 per hour

However, I have no ongoing engine fund and would have to stump up the cost of an overhaul if necessary.

Last edited by 'Chuffer' Dandridge; 26th Jul 2013 at 18:40.
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