gismo
Touchdown! Greaser!
As a few others have mentioned, avoiding debt for anything that doesn't appreciate or make money is one of the most important keys to financial success. Pay credit cards off completely each month, save and pay cash for cars and toys (including airplanes). The only downside is you may have to postpone ownership of something you covet for a few years but if you follow this plan you'll end up being able to afford to spend twice as much or more.
When I got into flying I joined a well run club with several airplanes to fly and 75 members who collectively owned the airplanes. A few years later I and seven friends bought a biplane to share and remained involved in that for several years. In the meantime I purchased an old Bonanza (with cash) which I owned for 10 years before buying the Baron I still own today. When I upgraded from the Bonanza to the Baron I partnered with another Bonanza owner who shared the same goals and we both sold our Bonanzas to buy the Baron. That partnership ended 5 years later when my partner moved out of state. By then I had accumulated enough cash to buy out his share per an agreement we had signed when the plane was originally purchased. The fact that I had a partner to share fixed expenses and upgrade costs with for 5 years is what made it possible to own the plane outright. Had I gone into debt and bought the Baron on my own in the first place I'd probably still owe money on it 20 years later.
Being steadily employed with a relatively well paying hi-tech job and being married to someone who also had a good career certainly contributed to my financial resources but I strongly believe the fact that the only debt I ever had was the mortgage on the houses I lived in really made a big difference.
Oh, and speaking of a wife, I have several pilot friends who developed AIDS (Aviation Induced Divorce Syndrome) and were forced to sell their airplanes and other expensive toys as a result. So if you do marry, choose carefully and find someone who either shares your aviation interests or at least supports it wholeheartedly.
When I got into flying I joined a well run club with several airplanes to fly and 75 members who collectively owned the airplanes. A few years later I and seven friends bought a biplane to share and remained involved in that for several years. In the meantime I purchased an old Bonanza (with cash) which I owned for 10 years before buying the Baron I still own today. When I upgraded from the Bonanza to the Baron I partnered with another Bonanza owner who shared the same goals and we both sold our Bonanzas to buy the Baron. That partnership ended 5 years later when my partner moved out of state. By then I had accumulated enough cash to buy out his share per an agreement we had signed when the plane was originally purchased. The fact that I had a partner to share fixed expenses and upgrade costs with for 5 years is what made it possible to own the plane outright. Had I gone into debt and bought the Baron on my own in the first place I'd probably still owe money on it 20 years later.
Being steadily employed with a relatively well paying hi-tech job and being married to someone who also had a good career certainly contributed to my financial resources but I strongly believe the fact that the only debt I ever had was the mortgage on the houses I lived in really made a big difference.
Oh, and speaking of a wife, I have several pilot friends who developed AIDS (Aviation Induced Divorce Syndrome) and were forced to sell their airplanes and other expensive toys as a result. So if you do marry, choose carefully and find someone who either shares your aviation interests or at least supports it wholeheartedly.