Flyingfanatic
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Aug 6, 2013
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Flying Fanatic
I understand the fundamental differences, but I'd like some feedback on the pluses and minuses of both.
In an equity club you assume higher risk for unforeseen maintenance and aircraft value depreciation. You may also be assessed for upgrades you really are not in favor.
You may also have difficulty selling a share within the time frame you desire.
Equity clubs may have smaller memberships. Typically a <6 member club is considered a partnership for insurance with much lower rates.
Non-equity clubs usually have larger memberships. 75% the members rarely fly and just pay to say they belong to a flying club (national average 2 hours a month).
@Clip4, while you bring up some good things to consider when joining a club, you're making a lot of assumptions here that don't necessarily apply to all equity flying clubs, and most of your points apply equally to non-equity flying clubs.
It really depends on how the club is run financially and whether they have good reserves. My club was very well run and maintenance reserves were built into the hourly rates for the airplanes. We were able to absorb surprises like $15,000 for new fuel bladders and some corrosion repair, three engine overhauls, etc without any additional assessments on share owners.
We did have three occasions in 15 years where there was an additional assessment: $200 per person for a nice new Diamond DA40, and $50/person, twice, for a portion of ADS-B upgrades. Those were a bargain for what members got in return!
As far as aircraft depreciation, that's really only in theory. Aircraft don't really depreciate unless you buy brand-new ones, or you beat the crap out of them. Most equity clubs treat their airplanes well because they own them, and even though we bought a four-year-old airplane, nine years later it's still worth what we paid for it.
Our club has a method for owners to sell their share back to the club if they're unable or unwilling to sell it on their own.
The insurance thing is true regardless of what type of club it is. There's a lot of types you really can't insure with more than 5 people, and our club's insurance was on a people-per-plane basis: We had 30 members and 3 airplanes, but if we added one more member (and thus had more than 10 people per airplane) our rates would have gone up about 10-15%.
As for what the right size club is, that likewise has nothing to do with equity vs. non-equity. The more planes you have, the more people per plane you can have and maintain good availability. I don't think I would want to have more than 4 or 5 people with only one airplane. With two airplanes, you can do 8-10 people per plane pretty easily, with 3 planes we had really excellent availability with 10 people per plane. 4 or 5 planes could probably support 12-15 people per plane, and so on.
Again, not necessarily. There are equity clubs that have tons of people who just want to own part of an airplane and never fly. They're the same people who own ramp queens, it's just that they're wasting less of their money and there's other people to keep the plane flying! Likewise, there are also non-equity clubs that are smaller and have a lot more active members. There was a non-equity club on our field with the same number of planes and the same number of members we had, for example.
There are numerous things to consider when choosing a flying club, and I won't re-hash them all here, but having been involved in flying clubs for nearly my entire aviation career, the club being equity vs. non-equity really doesn't make it onto my radar at all in terms of what's important when choosing a flying club. You want a club that's financially stable, has airplanes you want to fly at reasonable rates (not too low, or they won't be financially stable!), and maintains those airplanes well. The corporate structure of the club is way down the list of differentiators, and if you make it that far, your area has an embarrassment of riches when it comes to flying clubs.
Maybe I should have said aircraft values are highly variable.. If you are holding a share during a period of economic down turn you are going to take a hair cut and may have difficulty selling it.
In my view, clubs that refund the equity if you want out are not equity clubs. Many get themselves in trouble very quickly after an economic down turn as revenues are reduced and reserves are spent to buy back memberships.
As with any club, some are managed really well, some really bad. I have seen both on the equity an non equity side as a member. A change in a couple key people can make a huge difference.
The plane he is/was going to purchase is an 1976 Archer II. Owner is screwing around with the purchase and our member is getting cold feet. So we may end up going with another plane and go equity membership. I really want non-equity as we are in rural PA and selling the membership would be difficult due to the low amount of pilots in the area. Non-equity, I would think, would be easier to walk away from.
The thing I’m having a problem with is getting a ballpark quote on insurance. Our 8 potential members include a young lady, 17 years old with zero time, 1 student with over 300 hours, a freshly minted pilot with 70 hours and the rest are 300+ some with IFR, complex etc. hard to budget an hourly rate with out some sort of idea on insurance cost. Anyone have a ballpark I can budget? AOPA insurance wants to know exactly which plane we have. I’m thinking it will either be the archer with $63,000 hull coverage or a 172 with the same hull.
My understanding is a equity club is all the issues of owning plus all the inconveniences of renting.
Not sure where you're getting that...
Issues of owning:
* Costs a crap-ton of money to start
* Costs a crap-ton of money to maintain
* Have to be ready to spend a third crap-ton of money at a moment's notice
Inconveniences of renting:
* Beat-up planes
* Hard to go on a trip
* Expensive hourly costs discourage you from going on trips anyway
* Hard to get a plane at the last minute
None of those applied to my equity club... IMO, it was more like all of the benefits of not having to own an airplane, with most of the benefits of owning an airplane... And some things you can't get from owning, like having three different airplanes so you can choose the best one for the mission of the day!
But again, none of this really has anything to do with equity vs. non-equity.
Mx wise with a good prebuy and a good pilot most basic planes arnt that bad on the upkeep side.
Most clubs have beat planes too, if the average person flying it is a weekend warrior the plane is going to get beat up, just the club plane might have newer paint and a airtex pleather interior.
Yeah, but it's always going to be more expensive to own than to share the cost of ownership with others.
Again, depends on the club. Some clubs have cheap old ratty airplanes. My club has a 2006 DA40 with original leather interior, a 1980 Archer with a nice new leather interior, and a 1978 R182 with literally the nicest leather interior I've ever seen on a small plane - Super soft leather, Cessna logo embroidered into the headrests, etc. They all have great paint too, since we painted the R182 a few years ago.
Yeah, but it's always going to be more expensive to own than to share the cost of ownership with others.
Again, depends on the club. Some clubs have cheap old ratty airplanes. My club has a 2006 DA40 with original leather interior, a 1980 Archer with a nice new leather interior, and a 1978 R182 with literally the nicest leather interior I've ever seen on a small plane - Super soft leather, Cessna logo embroidered into the headrests, etc. They all have great paint too, since we painted the R182 a few years ago.
Equity - you own something, plus. You have to sell to get out, minus.
Non-equity - not on the hook for big expenses, plus. It is not yours and you probably have less power on direction of the club, minus.
Of course it all depends on how the rules of the club are written.
I belong to a non-equity club in which the board of directors is elected by the membership. My attitude is that if the members don't get a vote, then it's not really a club, it's an FBO offering "memberships."Equity - you own something, plus. You have to sell to get out, minus.
Non-equity - not on the hook for big expenses, plus. It is not yours and you probably have less power on direction of the club, minus.
Of course it all depends on how the rules of the club are written.
What are your monthly dues and per hour rates? How many members do you have?
It's an equity club, I assume?
I see lots more people TRYING to sell a membership than looking to buy one, for whatever that’s matters
Do you mean 501c3? If so I'm kinda surprised a flying club is able to qualify.
501c7 sounds very possible, yes (but not quite as tax-advantaged, IIRC).