Given the market crash, it's hard not to believe we're already in a recession.
Actually, being an AP might be a fun retirement gig. Two years of school? OK, could be helpful in getting me out of the house (wife would like that). Where to train? Surely there are schools in the ATL area. And..... not finding it easy to search. Doesn't seem like there are many schools around that can graduate an AP.
Having always owned a certified plane; I’m curious, are these types of issues more easily handled on experimentals?
I’m thinking at least parts should be easier to find..?
Given the market crash, it's hard not to believe we're already in a recession.
Actually, being an AP might be a fun retirement gig. Two years of school? OK, could be helpful in getting me out of the house (wife would like that). Where to train? Surely there are schools in the ATL area. And..... not finding it easy to search. Doesn't seem like there are many schools around that can graduate an AP.
I am starting AP school this august(next month), 4 nights a week. The community college adviser I talked to suggested I go directly to a local FAA office and present my AMT log and experience in order to get a 8610-2 letter to take the AP tests. My AP/IA that helps me with my plane has been telling me the same thing for years now,"go get your AP".Check the local community college or whatever they call them in GA. The one in my city has a thriving aviation program including A&P.
Cheers
That's my sense as well, talking to multiple shops and engine builders. The high prices have motivated a lot of hangar queens to go on the market, and the new eager owners are discovering that sitting planes have lots of things that need fixing. Good shops have no shortage of work right now.I have to wonder if part of the problem is that the increase in demand for GA airplanes that drove prices up has resulted in a corresponding increase in demand for mechanic services, without a corresponding increase in supply.
My A&P has certainly picked up a lot of this type of business. He’s turning people away.That's my sense as well, talking to multiple shops and engine builders. The high prices have motivated a lot of hangar queens to go on the market, and the new eager owners are discovering that sitting planes have lots of things that need fixing. Good shops have no shortage of work right now.
Given the market crash, it's hard not to believe we're already in a recession.
Actually, being an AP might be a fun retirement gig. Two years of school? OK, could be helpful in getting me out of the house (wife would like that). Where to train? Surely there are schools in the ATL area. And..... not finding it easy to search. Doesn't seem like there are many schools around that can graduate an AP.
Except that doesn’t account for the 2 million or so folks who’ve just stepped away from the US labor market entirely. But that’s not as bad as it seems, because the labor market in the US has been shrinking for decades while simultaneously becoming more efficient.... for the pay that you're offering...
i handle maintenance for a small fleet. to me it sounds like they don't know how to talk to a shop. i'm in socal as well and if something pops up i can find 3-4 shops within a 30 minute flight to do almost anything within a few days. i don't understand this story
I'm in SoCal (Camarillo) and when I wanted to get a prebuy on two separate planes earlier this year just about every mechanic turned me down.Author lives in SoCal. He said South LA but several posts refer to places and businesses in San Diego.
It's a double edged sword. It's never been easier to get information and advice. There's only a few active pilots at my home field. I've gotten to know a couple and will go out of my way to go talk to them if their hangar is open. If I really have a question though this place will provide faster answers, and a larger variety. I think it's a net benefit.Sadly I see the community is more online based instead of airport based. 25 years ago there would be plenty of airport bums sit around talk, have some drinks.
Perhaps you should work directly for the NTSB. After glancing at the accident scene for 1 minute you can write a scathing report and then hit the bar.
Sure it does, in the part that you edited out. Supply and demand still drives that equation, you just gave a reason that supply is low.Except that doesn’t account for the 2 million or so folks who’ve just stepped away from the US labor market entirely.
handle maintenance for a small fleet.
. i don't understand this story
huh?See my quote of the first part of your post for the answer.
Sorry we’re losing another pilot owner.
In Taking on a new to them airplane is a HUGE risk. If they handed you a bill for the amount of work that would be required to minimize their liability,
I don't think it is unusual to spend up to a couple of years dealing with deferred, sloppy, or incorrect maintenance by the last owner of a used aircraft. One of the advantages of ownership is maintaining an aircraft to your own personal operational and safety standards. Many aircraft, especially bargains, are sold because their owners cannot keep up with operational and maintenance costs
When I retired from the Air Force I went to community college and got the certificates needed to test for an A&P rating. I never intended to wrench for a living. The skills learned to get the A&P are basic. Today's aircraft are progressively becoming more and more "electronic" and each component manufacturer has their own proprietary designs which combine everything into one architecture which make it nearly impossible to troubleshoot without an electrical engineering degree. Back in the analog days of standalone VHF/VORs, ADFs, transponders and steam gauges, just about every A&P could work on every airplane. Nowadays you have to engage a specialist in that specific equipment and no two airplanes are alike. The avionics industry has pretty much screwed us all by gouging us on subscriptions for the data the tax payer pays for and requiring all service of their equipment to be by their own approved service centers. Welcome to the digital age.
In the shops defense, it cost a LOT of money to run a maintenance shop on a decent size airport. Taking on a new to them airplane is a HUGE risk. If they handed you a bill for the amount of work that would be required to minimize their liability, most of us would scoff and rant online about them trying to ruin their business. I mean imagine the work it would take to research all the AD's, then dig into the airplane to ensure they had been complied with. They are after all assuming responsibility for every previous persons work. In this litigious society it doesn't matter if you were directly responsible, you can still get sued and likely be out big bucks.
My expectation is that when I do retire and buy the plane I’ll fly it straight to the AP and have it sit for a month or two as they fix things. Test fly, find problem, repeat. Then off to the avionics shop simewhere in the US for another month or two to fix/ install avionics.
When I retired from the Air Force I went to community college and got the certificates needed to test for an A&P rating. I never intended to wrench for a living. The skills learned to get the A&P are basic. Today's aircraft are progressively becoming more and more "electronic" and each component manufacturer has their own proprietary designs which combine everything into one architecture which make it nearly impossible to troubleshoot without an electrical engineering degree. Back in the analog days of standalone VHF/VORs, ADFs, transponders and steam gauges, just about every A&P could work on every airplane. Nowadays you have to engage a specialist in that specific equipment and no two airplanes are alike. The avionics industry has pretty much screwed us all by gouging us on subscriptions for the data the tax payer pays for and requiring all service of their equipment to be by their own approved service centers. Welcome to the digital age.
Lawyers don't care about that. Something happens and your in court.what liability? If they are inspecting, they have no liability for anything that is broken. Their liability comes from not doing their work to an industry standard. If it is as you suggest, no shop would ever take on a new customer. Shops not taking on a new customer is not driven by liability.
as far as bills that we will rant at, the bill should never be a surprise, but the work should also accurately find the right problem. If a shop is just guessing at the problem, they don’t k ow how to do their work and should lose customer.
I think this is a good point. There are a lot of owners who claim to enjoy flying, but really enjoy cramming as many screens as possible in front of them. I'm not convinced that glass cockpits make GA much safer, but they surely make it more expensive and difficult to service.
Owning an aircraft without first having a good relationship with a trustworthy AP IA is a recipe for disaster.