This is also my experience. Wide range of ages and both male and female.All I know is that I’m inundated with students, and most of them aren’t going to the airlines
This is also my experience. Wide range of ages and both male and female.All I know is that I’m inundated with students, and most of them aren’t going to the airlines
Hmm….. so you want me in a pine box because I’m old and my opinion doesn’t agree with yours….. yeah, just shoot those old geezers. There’s a hangar shortage everywhere anyway. Don’t get any blood on the planes though.
No idea of the big picture; I can only tell you my experience. I am pretty active, about 250 hours a year with a dozen or so students most of the time. I have worked at my present flight school since 2010.
My students are all ages, from mid-teens to one guy who is 79 working on his sport pilot certificate. When I think about the profile of my most common student, it is a male, usually between 20 and 40, wanting to learn how to fly because "I always wanted to," not with a career objective.
One thing though, how many of that age group are moving toward GA and how many are striving to be in the seats of a jet?
your prognostications have not come true in the 20-odd years I've been flying.
I want you in the pine box because your prognostications have not come true in the 20-odd years I've been flying, but they seem just as loud as the first day I found them floating in the aviation punchbowl.
Right foot first if you please. Also an updated spec sheet on any planes you'll be leaving behind... to help the widow liquidate the dying velocipede into the hands of one of us grim hobbyists who are blind to our doom.
But long term, they fly for a living, get to the point they have a good income, then get back into GA. Lots of retired airline pilots buy a GA airplane.
Also, the flying demographic will always be heavily to the older crowd. Much harder for most younger people to afford flying. Older people have a higher income typically, and the kids are out of the house. You see the same thing in auto racing. Some young ones trying to get to the point of making it their job, and the older ones, who wanted to do it when they were young, but could not afford it.
This fits my demographic. I soloed the day before my 60th birthday in late November.
I finally have the time and means to pursue my lifelong dream of flying my own plane, but I don't see any good deals out there for a capable time-builder training plane. Even the clapped out 150s/152s rejected from flight schools all seem to be gold plated with platinum linings. When they come up for sale they are snapped up by eager buyers before the ink dries on the ad. I know the flight school I am using has been actively working on tracking down more trainers - but at a reasonable cost.
ISC to SOC causation. (interstellar conditions to suborbital conditions for those outside of the loop)
Only near KROW.So you're saying aliens crash on short final too?
I think aviation has always been ahead of the inflation curve, no matter how far back you go. There’s some truth to policy changes and such having an effect on the industry, but I’m not sure it’s had the impact that some have predicted.If you had been flying 40-odd years, you might have a different perspective.
You make a valid point on both comments. I would suspect that most folks in that age group are working toward becoming a jet pilot of some flavor or another. That said, years ago, it was a bit easier for the blue collar worker to try their hand at ownership, but those days are more or less behind us, as the market has nearly priced them out. These days, those same folks have had to resort to renting, while the white collar individuals, being less affected by inflation, can still stomach the costs of aircraft ownership and have enough cabbage left over to actually fly and maintain it.Great point hangie. One thing though, how many of that age group are moving toward GA and how many are striving to be in the seats of a jet?
I think your last comment about the fleet is really valid. It’s not going to get any cheaper to be an aircraft owner, or even a renter.
Nice! I’m missing that 170 that I learned to fly this summer.
Nice! I’m missing that 170 that I learned to fly this summer.
And landing one is like landing on a trampoline!“Flying a 170 is like dancing with the belle of the ball” - Gary Gandy
And landing one is like landing on a trampoline!
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For me, at that stage of my flying I bought a nice Cessna 140 for my time builder. It was fun and relatively inexpensive to fly. I still have it even though I have had a few other planes come and go. Mine has a custom panel with a six pack and a 420 and ADS-B transponder. It is even currently IFR certified making a great and inexpensive to operate instrument trainer.
Thanks for providing that data. I did some research and it seems that I started my flight training about 18 months too late. If I had started earlier, I could have easily found 150s in serviceable shape for less than $20K, and equivalent 172's for only a little more. every time I see where a GA plane is lost due to an accident or storm damage, I realize that my dream of ownership keeps getting further out of reach. While there may have been insurance, I bet that there is no way they come even close to being able to buy a new plane, so that puts even more pressure on the used market.I gave $20K for her in 2005. She was a beautiful plane with a great running engine but it was almost TBO. With a fresh engine, ADS-B in out and a 420 done since I bought it, I turned down $45K for her about 8 months ago.
... maintenance and avionics shops are booked months out, ...
GA is going to be just fine.
adjusted for inflation, that equals $123.02/hr today.FYI, in 1979 a Grumman Tiger at my local filed was $30 an hour wet. But auto gas was under $1 a gallon. And a yearly income of $15,000 was not bad.
adjusted for inflation, that equals $123.02/hr today.
Maintenance booked up
The number of aircraft, Cessna listed on trade-a-plane is up and up a lot is this due to high bank loan rate, or people running for the Exit door.
I get to join the long line of sellers whose buyers backed out. Lucky me, I'm still an airplane owner. I'm not renewing my ads, I'm not doing a damn thing to sell this until Spring. I think Winter a crap time to sell an airplane.
It ain’t sold until the money is in the bank. I know of 4 sales that have fallen through in the last month when it came time for the check to clear.
I get to join the long line of sellers whose buyers backed out. Lucky me, I'm still an airplane owner. I'm not renewing my ads, I'm not doing a damn thing to sell this until Spring. I think Winter a crap time to sell an airplane.
The buyer was a military contractor, and I suspect he got deployed.That's a bummer, sorry to hear. Mind sharing what the justification was for pulling out of the deal?
I get to join the long line of sellers whose buyers backed out. Lucky me, I'm still an airplane owner. I'm not renewing my ads, I'm not doing a damn thing to sell this until Spring. I think Winter a crap time to sell an airplane.
Thats is what pretty airplane!I have an annual scheduled for the end of Feb, we’ll see. A few things were fixed over the year, running superbly right now.
I agree the peak is past, may as well enjoy ownership. I’m due for another Mackinac Island trip.
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If it's only a pinch send me a PM and tell me your thoughts. Only electrons.that sucks. I saw your ads - nice plane at a nice price. I've been eyeballing mooneys lately. Yours was just a pinch outside my price range. good luck with your sale when you relist !