Ken Ibold
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2005
- Messages
- 5,889
- Location
- Jacksonville, Florida
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Display name:
Ken Ibold
Personally, I think the root cause of general aviation's demise is not necessarily connected to cost. There are plenty of costly pursuits out there that are becoming more popular. I think there are two issues: comfort/convenience and practicality.
Take a guy out of his Lexus and put him into a beat up trainer with lousy heat and no air conditioning and the smell of old sweat. Nice first impression. Lots of people wash out simply because light planes bounce around a lot and makes them uncomfortable. OK, maybe he sticks with it anyway, gets a certificate, and rents a newish airplane with OK avionics, lousy heat and no air conditioning. After a while of renting, he gets tired of his wife/family complaining about bumping around all the time, lousy heat and no air conditioning, and he washes out.
Maybe he sticks with it anyway for a while. After a few dozen hamburger runs and weekend trips to the beach, maybe he decides that the rental cars and hotel bills are taking the fun out of the weekend jaunts, and so he washes out.
Maybe the cost is no issue on any level. But after a while he gets tired of crawling around inspecting landing gear and getting into the cockpit with hands smelling like gas and being treated like crap by the FBOs because he's not buying 500 gallons of jet A, and being tired after dealing with the noise and vibration and stress involved in flying, and cleaning the puke out of the upholstery because his kid got airsick on a hot bumpy approach, and getting delayed by weather and showing up with the FBO closed, and poor mechanical reliability ... etc.
So after all this, maybe he decides to spend a hundred grand on an RV for traveling in comfort. Or maybe he just decides to fly first class commercially. Or maybe instead of a toy he can use twice a month he buys a ridiculously fast sports car he can use almost every day, or a yacht he can entertain clients on and write part of it off as a business expense, or maybe he decides there just aren't many places he really wants to GO.
No way it's all about cost, in my opinion.
Take a guy out of his Lexus and put him into a beat up trainer with lousy heat and no air conditioning and the smell of old sweat. Nice first impression. Lots of people wash out simply because light planes bounce around a lot and makes them uncomfortable. OK, maybe he sticks with it anyway, gets a certificate, and rents a newish airplane with OK avionics, lousy heat and no air conditioning. After a while of renting, he gets tired of his wife/family complaining about bumping around all the time, lousy heat and no air conditioning, and he washes out.
Maybe he sticks with it anyway for a while. After a few dozen hamburger runs and weekend trips to the beach, maybe he decides that the rental cars and hotel bills are taking the fun out of the weekend jaunts, and so he washes out.
Maybe the cost is no issue on any level. But after a while he gets tired of crawling around inspecting landing gear and getting into the cockpit with hands smelling like gas and being treated like crap by the FBOs because he's not buying 500 gallons of jet A, and being tired after dealing with the noise and vibration and stress involved in flying, and cleaning the puke out of the upholstery because his kid got airsick on a hot bumpy approach, and getting delayed by weather and showing up with the FBO closed, and poor mechanical reliability ... etc.
So after all this, maybe he decides to spend a hundred grand on an RV for traveling in comfort. Or maybe he just decides to fly first class commercially. Or maybe instead of a toy he can use twice a month he buys a ridiculously fast sports car he can use almost every day, or a yacht he can entertain clients on and write part of it off as a business expense, or maybe he decides there just aren't many places he really wants to GO.
No way it's all about cost, in my opinion.