You own a plane. You are not poor.
I don't know about that.When you are poor and buy an old used vehicle, the odds of it needing expensive repairs is quite a bit higher than when you're buying cars under warranty.
It becomes illegal when it is done to fix prices in an industry.Sharing premium information is not illegal. This is kinda like Complaining that McDonald’s and Burger King are colluding by sharing their prices with each other.
Well, not when you buy it anyway... .You own a plane. You are not poor.
Proving it is the difficult part. The data being public, is not price fixing.It becomes illegal when it is done to fix prices in an industry.
Well, not when you buy it anyway... .
An old family friend spent 22 years building one in his spare time. He didn't go bankrupt getting it done but he didn't live long enough to fly it.Or build it ... as the case may be!
An old family friend spent 22 years building one in his spare time. He didn't go bankrupt getting it done but he didn't live long enough to fly it.
There is a great sense of accomplishment that comes with building your own I'm sure, especially one that takes you over a decade to complete in your spare time.One of my mentors in learning to build aircraft spent 10 years building from plans. A beautiful plane that he flew a half dozen times and sold. Mine took about three years to build & I had a plane to fly until this one was completed.
Likely could have just bought a plane for the same money but building is a great enjoyment and I know who built it & how it was built. I'd like to build again but some more pressing things are on the plate now so that will have to wait.
It's not "sharing", but yes, there are few underwriters. Your broker submits your info to several underwriters for quote and he or you can pick the best deal. If you go to another broker, they'll be submitting your info to the same underwriters, and the under writer doesn't want to waste time requoting you to another broker. As I understand it the broker's commission is pretty standard so for any particular underwriter you're not going to get a better deal shopping different brokers.Once you put in your name or N# to a broker (feel certain my broker does not), that broker will then share all your proffered details with the few insurance companies out there and no hope to get a competing quote. Maybe there are so few underwriters out there that underwriter sharing is how this gets done...doesn't matter how.
I'm poor because I own an airplane.You own a plane. You are not poor.
Considering acts of war are excluded in every policy I’ve ever seen, that doesn’t make much sense to me.
Contact A.I.R. & ask for Victoria ... https://air-pros.com/victorianeuville/
In that scenario, I'd probably be looking for someone experienced to do the 40 hours either with me or without me. More because of the "250 hours total" than anything else. Your alternative is to find a flying aircraft you can train in.Related question: I looked at a nice experimental near me, recently. Build completed, AW cert received, but the builder had a stroke and doesn't trust himself to fly anymore. Has not started the 40-hours fly-off, so a brand-new experimental.
Went thru EAA for an insurance quote. As a not-yet-tailwheel-endorsed pilot (for a tailwheel experimental), with 250 hours total, the $5500 quote for hull + liability was reason for pause. But, the catch-22 problem is that the insurance doesn't start until after 15 hours of dual in the aircraft, followed by 10 hours of solo. How can the 'fly off' happen? Just 'run naked' (i.e. uninsured) for the first 40 hours? If so, what's the point of insurance?
Related question: I looked at a nice experimental near me, recently. Build completed, AW cert received, but the builder had a stroke and doesn't trust himself to fly anymore. Has not started the 40-hours fly-off, so a brand-new experimental.
Went thru EAA for an insurance quote. As a not-yet-tailwheel-endorsed pilot (for a tailwheel experimental), with 250 hours total, the $5500 quote for hull + liability was reason for pause. But, the catch-22 problem is that the insurance doesn't start until after 15 hours of dual in the aircraft, followed by 10 hours of solo. How can the 'fly off' happen? Just 'run naked' (i.e. uninsured) for the first 40 hours? If so, what's the point of insurance?
Related question: I looked at a nice experimental near me, recently. Build completed, AW cert received, but the builder had a stroke and doesn't trust himself to fly anymore. Has not started the 40-hours fly-off, so a brand-new experimental.
Went thru EAA for an insurance quote. As a not-yet-tailwheel-endorsed pilot (for a tailwheel experimental), with 250 hours total, the $5500 quote for hull + liability was reason for pause. But, the catch-22 problem is that the insurance doesn't start until after 15 hours of dual in the aircraft, followed by 10 hours of solo. How can the 'fly off' happen? Just 'run naked' (i.e. uninsured) for the first 40 hours? If so, what's the point of insurance?
Related question: I looked at a nice experimental near me, recently. Build completed, AW cert received, but the builder had a stroke and doesn't trust himself to fly anymore. Has not started the 40-hours fly-off, so a brand-new experimental.
Went thru EAA for an insurance quote. As a not-yet-tailwheel-endorsed pilot (for a tailwheel experimental), with 250 hours total, the $5500 quote for hull + liability was reason for pause. But, the catch-22 problem is that the insurance doesn't start until after 15 hours of dual in the aircraft, followed by 10 hours of solo. How can the 'fly off' happen? Just 'run naked' (i.e. uninsured) for the first 40 hours? If so, what's the point of insurance?
If you don’t survive, the crash probably doesn’t matter. And if you do survive the crash, you count yourself lucky and move on. At least that’s how I always looked at.What if you total it in the first year? You're not gonna replace it for the $2K you've saved so far.