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-   -   AW 139 flight simulator rates (https://www.pprune.org/rotorheads/577155-aw-139-flight-simulator-rates.html)

rayfinkel 5th Apr 2016 02:25

AW 139 flight simulator rates
 
Hi, I am trying to get hourly rates for AW 139 flight simulators. Mainly for recurrent training OPC check. All info would be appreciated. Do most of your employers have contracts with training companies or is pay by the hour?

EESDL 5th Apr 2016 16:03

How many hours are you after and over what time span?
Will this be repeat business - ie will you be willing to sign a contract for future use?
Dry or Wet lease?
Whilst you would think the current situation would mean a better price should be available - the fact that you are looking for hours means you have a requirement, which is probably legislatively-led, so why reduce price ;-)

SFIM 5th Apr 2016 17:30

Expect a per session 2 hour ad hoc price wet of around €4000

krypton_john 5th Apr 2016 21:01

Dry/wet rates for *simulator* time?

My oh my, these simulators are getting very realistic these days!

gulliBell 5th Apr 2016 21:45

Wet = simulator + instructor
Dry = simulator only.

rayfinkel 6th Apr 2016 01:07

Thanks for the information.
OPC checks with about 6 hours level D sim time.
I was under the impression it was around €13000 wet.
Does that sound about right?

krypton_john 6th Apr 2016 04:01

Ah, ok.

But €4000 for two hours wet in a simulator? US$2200 per hour? That sounds like the real thing, not a simulator (C&D $2163)

212man 6th Apr 2016 06:52


But €4000 for two hours wet in a simulator? US$2200 per hour? That sounds like the real thing, not a simulator (C&D $2163)
I guess you have never hired a simulator before then? Totally normal rates for a Level D FFS.

gulliBell 6th Apr 2016 11:07

Recurrent courses typically about $25k USD. That gets you course materials, 2 days in the classroom with ground instructor covering systems revision, maybe a few hours on the integrated procedures trainer, 4 hours simulator training + 2 hours flight test. In other words, 6 hours simulator time + 4 hours pre/post briefing with the flight instructor, 12 hours classroom = $25k.

krypton_john 6th Apr 2016 20:55

212Man you're right, not a single second logged in sims. Not so much of that down these parts.

But What I don't follow is... why are sims so expensive? No fuel, no engines, no dynamic components, no risk etc?

the coyote 6th Apr 2016 21:00

Probably because they cost about as much as the aircraft don't they?

Phone Wind 6th Apr 2016 21:48


6 hours simulator time
That sounds way too low for an AW139 unless that's 6 monthly

krypton_john 6th Apr 2016 23:17

the coyote: The capital cost is one thing, but the operational cost is what I was commenting on. Plus the real thing doesn't always get to fly that often whereas the simulators can be booked day and night.

rayfinkel 7th Apr 2016 00:09

Phone Wind, yes its the 6 monthly check.

whoknows idont 7th Apr 2016 04:52


Originally Posted by krypton_john (Post 9335817)
the coyote: The capital cost is one thing, but the operational cost is what I was commenting on. Plus the real thing doesn't always get to fly that often whereas the simulators can be booked day and night.

Maybe there is not enough demand for a AW139 simulator to be booked out day and night?
Still I find that quite eye-watering as well. Electricity instead of fuel, maintenance & insurance must be a fraction of the real thing. Sounds like a license to print money issued by regulatory requirements.

belly tank 7th Apr 2016 05:19

I believe the one in KL is in the vicinity of US$1500-2000 per hour dry and its usually booked 24/7 apart from maintenance during the wee hours of the morning.

gulliBell 7th Apr 2016 10:04

The flight simulators are expensive to maintain. Hydraulics + vibration platform, computers, visual system, software, annual certification, the air conditioned facility that it's contained in, plus the spare parts inventory. There are many specialist engineering and maintenance staff required, flight instructors, support and admin staff etc. The initial capital outlay is about that of the real aircraft also. Add up all these costs, plus the cost of the finance to pay for it all, and divide that by the annual revenue hours, and you'll find there isn't much profit margin built into the client chargeable rate.

ZFT 7th Apr 2016 13:49

People are kidding themselves here. Civil FFS’s whether they be Boeing, Airbus, Rotary or Business Jets all basically cost the same to build with the only delta being the aircraft parts and data (normally procured from the airframe OEM).

The Rotary and/or Business Jet training business has been very cleverly turned into a closed shop by CAE and FSI (and now Textron) by getting sole source agreements with the airframe OEMs for the data making other TDMs unable to build competitive platforms.

Hence the unbelievably high rates that are quoted within this thread.

outhouse 7th Apr 2016 13:50

Gulf Helicopters 139 sim
 
Gulf Helicopters had a 139 sim with various approvals a few years ago when I was Training Manager.
Maybe worth a contact, no idea now of cost or active approvals currently available.
:cool:

Outwest 7th Apr 2016 14:29


Gulf Helicopters had a 139 sim with various approvals a few years ago
Was level B when we used it.....not sure if D now or not


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