I think you are putting out bad information that if others unknowingly accept it hurts aviation. So I will be blunt.
With this post you strike me as the kind of guy who has health insurance; life insurance; long term disability insurance; full coverage on your boats, cars toys; and looks out the window for clouds and doesn't go out if there are thunderstorms to avoid lightning.
If you are that afraid of everything why fly at all? It is a risk? Why leave your house?
You are GREATLY over exaggerating the risks, but that is ok that is common when people do not know what they are talking about that conservative bone kicks in. Thing is that you are wrong and you are speaking as if you actually know what you are talking about.... Do you even own an airplane? Do you actually know what it costs to keep and feed a trainer class airplane?
I'll try responding to this one time.
If owning a trainer is such a good investment then why isn't everyone lined up to do it? That's what we're talking about here, the OP is looking at it as an investment that he will get a loan on and in addition to using it for his training perhaps rent it out for others. You make it sound like such a slam dunk profit machine I'm surprised you don't want to finance it for him.
To do this he would want to put the aircraft in a business entity, that cost money to put in place. Unless you think he should just do it as individual property? Say $500. I'll also say he buys it without paying sales tax in this fantasy scenario.
Then he is going to need some money to go shopping, pre-buy expense, travel, buyers agent, etc. Unless you think he should just call a guy and if it sounds good buy it? Budget $2,000
He needs one IFR certified with a lower time motor, say $30K.
Now he needs a loan say 10 years at 10% interest with 30% down. So $9K in cash plus the note.
The OP holds no rating so he'll have to have it ferried back budget $500.
Now he needs a hangar say $250 a month (I'm just guessing).
Now he needs insurance with no rating, $1500 (I'm guessing again).
Now he can finally fly it for training. Let's consider direct cost as fuel $6 per at 7 GPH or $42 per hour.
Let's say the aircraft is almost perfect and he never does anything much except 1 annual and 4 oil changes while flying it 200 hours over 12 months. Call it $1500.
Let's stop at 200 hours over the first year and add it up.
One time cost
$500 + $2000 + $9,000 + $500 = $12K
Recurring over first year
Loan $277 X 12 months = $3300
Fuel 200 hours 7 GPH X $6 = $8,400
Hangar $250 X 12 = $3000
Insurance 12 months = $1500
Total it all $28,200 divided by 200 hours $141 per hour.
Since most places in the country you can rent a 150 for much less than that, where is the up side, where is the savings, where is the investment?
What happens if it needs a repair, or grandma gets sick and he has to stop flying, or he finds out he really doesn't like flying, or ?. Now he's really stuck.
You can shave all those numbers down, park it outside, do your own oil changes, make it as slick as you want, there is just no way that makes financial sense when you consider the downside risk.
Why don't you respond with some math to the contrary.