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- 19,562
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Bro do you even lift
What about for singles?
dunno, haven’t been tracking those.
What about for singles?
How many Barons and 340s were sold each month? In December there were none of each?$197,910 ave price for baron 11/1/2022
$185,057 ave price for baron 1/3/2023
$169,502 ave price for baron 2/3/2023
$191,411 ave price for baron 3/4/2023
$186,757 ave price for baron 4/3/2023
$291,012 ave price for 340s 11/1/2022
$278,219 ave price for 340s 1/3/2023
$267,906 ave price for 340s 2/3/2023
$253,613 ave price for 340s 3/4/2023
$261,594 ave price for 340s 4/3/2023
If I were to summarize the consensus from the last 10 pages of threads it'd be something like: "airplane prices have likely peaked but it'll be a while before they start settling down". So far that consensus attitude has been about correct. Inventory is up over 2020/2021 levels but it's been the same for about the last 6-9 months from my casual (daily) TAP scrolling.Is there a consensus on aircraft prices? I'm not close enough to the market to get a feel for it. I'm not in the market, I'm just curious.
How many Barons and 340s were sold each month? In December there were none of each?
no idea how many were sold, I'm just tracking average prices listed for baron's and 340's on TaP and Controller once a month except for december when I got lost and couldn't find my way home.
Still waiting for the market to collapse...
Still waiting for the market to collapse...
Still waiting
In the case of Barons there are still "new" ones out in the wild so if one of those gets put on TAP it's going to skew the average significantly. Not saying that's what happened here though.$197,910 ave price for baron 11/1/2022
$185,057 ave price for baron 1/3/2023
$169,502 ave price for baron 2/3/2023
$191,411 ave price for baron 3/4/2023
$186,757 ave price for baron 4/3/2023
$291,012 ave price for 340s 11/1/2022
$278,219 ave price for 340s 1/3/2023
$267,906 ave price for 340s 2/3/2023
$253,613 ave price for 340s 3/4/2023
$261,594 ave price for 340s 4/3/2023
Yeah. That. Inflation running as high as it is, prices many not rise as fast but not going back to 2019 prices.Market won’t change. The economy is collapsing.
Expect prices to rise for everything.
Prices started going up in 2017 when basicmed passed. They’ll never drop below the prices we saw before thatYeah. That. Inflation running as high as it is, prices many not rise as fast but not going back to 2019 prices.
Mind blowing the costs of some of the 50+ year old planes.Prices started going up in 2017 when basicmed passed. They’ll never drop below the prices we saw before that
How many 50+ year old boats with high time engines original paint and interior and old electronics or 50+ old cars in the same condition have Mind blowing value/ cost as aircraft? Aircraft seem to be in their own lane and have their own rules of value, never say never to a huge price drop.Mind blowing the costs of some of the 50+ year old planes.
I started tracking 172 prices on barnstormers, sort of an aviation version of the Big Mac Index.What about for singles?
How many 50+ year old boats with high time engines original paint and interior and old electronics or 50+ old cars in the same condition have Mind blowing value/ cost as aircraft?
Perfectly stated.There is a steady stream of new boats and cars being manufactured to replace older boats and cars. It is not cost effective to maintain a 30 year old car when there are plenty of 10-20 year old cars available at a reasonable cost. Can't say that about airplanes.
The GA market is kind of like the car market in Cuba.
I’ve noticed very little difference in straight leg 182 prices. They’re up, it anythingI started tracking 172 prices on barnstormers, sort of an aviation version of the Big Mac Index.
Yes, the LADA a Russian car AvtoVAZ were produced with technical assistance from Fiat and marketed under the Zhiguli designation. The Lada brand appeared in 1973, initially being overseas-focused. Cuba loves their Lada cars, like the Cessna 172 it's over 50 years old with very little change.There is a steady stream of new boats and cars being manufactured to replace older boats and cars. It is not cost effective to maintain a 30 year old car when there are plenty of 10-20 year old cars available at a reasonable cost. Can't say that about airplanes.
The GA market is kind of like the car market in Cuba.
We can't compare average 50 year old cars. A new 172 in 1970 was 4x the average car price. For the price of a new 172 in 1970, we are in Ferrari or Porsche 911 category. A 1970 Ferrari or 911 that was maintained similarly to a 172 would be far more valuable than the airplane is today. Comparing the value to homes, a 172 in 1970 was half the price of the average home. Home appreciation has far exceeded airplane appreciation. The cost to have maintained that 172 for the past 50 years would substantially eclipse the current value. Many of the low value airplanes that were neglected and not maintained did not survive and were junked long ago.How many 50+ year old boats with high time engines original paint and interior and old electronics or 50+ old cars in the same condition have Mind blowing value/ cost as aircraft? Aircraft seem to be in their own lane and have their own rules of value, never say never to a huge price drop.
Definitely an interesting perspective.One of the reasons I got back into flying and plane ownership 20 years ago was that buying and owning cars of the same age, quality and interest was a lot more expensive than a comparable plane. That trend has only accelerated and sometimes it seems with cars that anything interesting and having lasting value is $100K.. and you can't do a lot with it after you buy it. Buying and owning planes as interesting toys remains a much better value.
The reason for this has to do with barriers to entry such as licensing, medical status and storage cost holding plane prices down in comparison, but that's another issue.
Prices go up during inflation. Value of dollar is less. So a plane that cost $100 in 2018 could cost $200 in todays weaker and less valuable dollars.
Inflation means prices go up. No inflation doesn’t mean prices come down. It just means they don’t go up. The only way prices overall dime down is deflation - which we last saw in the Great Depression.
You can say that again! 182 prices have defied gravity more than any other model I've seen.I’ve noticed very little difference in straight leg 182 prices. They’re up, it anything
We can't compare average 50 year old cars. A new 172 in 1970 was 4x the average car price. For the price of a new 172 in 1970, we are in Ferrari or Porsche 911 category. A 1970 Ferrari or 911 that was maintained similarly to a 172 would be far more valuable than the airplane is today. Comparing the value to homes, a 172 in 1970 was half the price of the average home. Home appreciation has far exceeded airplane appreciation. The cost to have maintained that 172 for the past 50 years would substantially eclipse the current value. Many of the low value airplanes that were neglected and not maintained did not survive and were junked long ago.
I'd rather have the 1 Skyhawk, and I don't even like SkyhawksAcually, what a new Skyhawk costs would buy you three Porsche 911s.
I’m not complaining lolYou can say that again! 182 prices have defied gravity more than any other model I've seen.
There's been a couple postings where I thought "oh, ok, seems like maybe the 182 market will correct a bit" and then those feelings vanish when I see new posts like: these.