I wonder what the effect of all the weather and flight planning tools we have now is. I know I've made a lot of flights with internet/ADS-B weather data that I probably wouldn't have tried if I had to rely on old school telephone briefings.
What do you think you are going to do in a 182T, besides look like a fairy with that trainer wheel up front.
Your premise is flawed: There are more pilots today than at any time in the last 30+ years. Plot below only goes through 2020, but FAA stats show there were 757,000 pilots by the end of 2022. That's almost 30% growth in the number of pilots since 2016.
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Number of active pilots in the U.S. 2020 | Statista
It is widely known that there is a pilot shortage in the United States – a view seemingly supported by the figures: by 2016 there were only around 584,000 pilots in the U.S.www.statista.com
Today I learned that ATPs can't fly GA.Because student certificates don't expire, it appears that the number of pilots is growing rapidly, but that's not the case because many of those students drop out and are no longer active. If you look at line 16, Pilot total without Student Category, you'll see that 2022's count is about 2500 below 2013's. Also please note that there were 17,000 more Airline Transport rated pilots in 2022 than 2013, so the number of GA pilots is down four or five percent from 2013, but is up a little from 2016, which was the lowest point.
Today I learned that ATPs can't fly GA.
They can at age 65, but they have to retest all certificates since the ATP expires at 65.
Uh oh! Don’t send the FAA after me! No one told me that!Today I learned that ATPs can't fly GA.
I don't think it expires, just can't be used in US part 121 operations. When age 60 was the rule some pilots went to other countries to use their qualifications. And before the age 60 rule came into effect, there was no upper age limit.
Which countries?Cheap clapped out airplanes get bought and shipped out of the country.
All of them. My brothers 172 went to the Philippines.Do you need
Which countries?
Flying is BOOMING in my area. Price of gas $7.80 a gallon isn't slowing it down. Thank goodness someone put a pump in at Las Cruces selling gas at cost at $5.50 recently.
Both my field (KDNA Dona Ana) and Las Cruces (KLRU) have increased student flying to levels that are higher than when I started flying in 2006 (and that was $2.50 gas and a $50 C-152 rental wet). I *think* we're getting a bunch of students that are coming here rather than Arizona ... no Chinese yet, but lots of heavy dialect on frequency. Am guessing they count as FAA pilots since they're testing here prior to returning to their home country.
Yep. A 210 I was trying to buy went to Brazil on Friday. They don't even inspect them. Just wire the cash and send someone up to fly it away.All of them. My brothers 172 went to the Philippines.
Which countries?
Some people like building, some people like flying. There's a lot of RV's out there that have changed owners pretty quick after the flyoff. In 30 seconds on tap I saw 2 rv14's with 60 and 65 hours for sale. Id be willing to bet more rv10 kits are completed every year than pa28's are sold. Cirrus is really the only single sold with any numbers that aren't trainers, but I've seen a lot of sr20 trainers. Mooney is dead. Bonanza is on life support. Piper pretty strictly just a trainer and have killed the Arrow and Seneca after killing the pa32 and 236. Despite both going for a premium on the used market. Cessna sold 199 172's and 182t's combined.If so, GA will shrink to almost nothing. The people who want to build planes is a tiny subset of the already small set of people who want to fly them.
A 206 I wanted to buy a number of years ago went to Colombia. The seller got asking price wired to his bank account. I could not match that.A 210 I was trying to buy went to Brazil on Friday. They don't even inspect them. Just wire the cash and send someone up to fly it away.
True, but those models were also heavy subsidized to include the Columbia on the US side. Without that public money there wouldn't have been no innovation except on the EU side who still subsidized on a regular basis.Cirrus and Diamond were the last ones to really innovate and the sr22 was certified nearly a quarter century ago.
Oh, dear.Today I learned that ATPs can't fly GA.
What isn't subsidized these days?True, but those models were also heavy subsidized to include the Columbia on the US side. Without that public money there wouldn't have been no innovation except on the EU side who still subsidized on a regular basis.
You'll also find a number of aircraft heading south of the border end up in the drug trade with most stolen but in some cases the aircraft are bought outright, site unseen to keep up the illusion of a legit ops. Saw that 25 years ago and it still happens today.
New aircraft innovations in the US. The millions spent in the mid-90s were the last spent on this that gave you the Cirrus and several others. But with no widespread interest from the private GA market everyone took their new toys and went home. Even with MOSAIC there are no hand-outs like there was back then. It is what it is.What isn't subsidized these days?
…It's safe to assume that a large portion of airplane owners probably do it professionally as well...
I just pulling from my observations but probably 75% of the owners I know are or were professional pilots. Following the post on the groups associated with airplanes I'm interested in it seems a lot of people chiming in with new purchases are airline guys. Of course YMMV.Is it? None of our partners fly professionally.
Interesting. But I think location and possibly demographics have more an influence on that percentage than a simple value. For example, of all the customers I had in a 5 state region only about 10% were professional pilots. Even at the day job few pilots participated in recreational flying and if they did fly it was to make extra money or gain experience to move into the next level. Most of my clients were self-made from different backgrounds and experience levels not related to aviation at all.I just pulling from my observations but probably 75% of the owners I know are or were professional pilots.
You'll also find a number of aircraft heading south of the border end up in the drug trade with most stolen but in some cases the aircraft are bought outright, site unseen to keep up the illusion of a legit ops. Saw that 25 years ago and it still happens today.
A few years ago when I was shopping for an Arrow, I found a prospect in Miami. A bit of research on the seller indicated he was a felon. Dug up the case and he had been convicted for serving as a straw buyer of aircraft for cartels.
I just pulling from my observations but probably 75% of the owners I know are or were professional pilots. Following the post on the groups associated with airplanes I'm interested in it seems a lot of people chiming in with new purchases are airline guys. Of course YMMV.
I'll take that as "No."