Grasshopper
Filing Flight Plan
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- Nov 3, 2015
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Grasshopper
For range, speed and comfort (large cabin class) it would be either the Gulfstream G550/G650 or a Bombardier Global Express 5000/6000.
Uh, "400,000 grand" would certainly enable you to buy a G650. Perhaps you meant $400,000, which would be $400 grand.Making 400,000 grand gets you into the top 1% which isn't going to get close to covering a G550. Butttt, if I made enough to be in the market to buy something of the like I would take a G650 tomorrow.
Uh, "400,000 grand" would certainly enable you to buy a G650. Perhaps you meant $400,000, which would be $400 grand.
sorry.
I think many of us on here are already in the 1%. So I'll go with a 40 year old Skylane.
I think many of us on here are already in the 1%. So I'll go with a 40 year old Skylane.
Am I the only pilot that finds biz jets about as interesting as vacuum cleaners?
It really depends what methodology you are using... Personally I don't believe many here are in the 1 percentile. Some, probably yes.
NetJets. Much safer and thriftier than buying your own.
NetJets. Much safer and thriftier than buying your own.
But that takes all the fun out of it.
As a real man I'd get a F104, have all my crap and children shipped Alaska or Virgin, or Uhaul.
I think some people don't realize how low the threshold for being in the 1% is, and how much to operate a jet costs.
Based on the Internal Revenue Service’s 2010-2014 database below, here’s how much the top Americans make:
Top 1%: $380,354
Top 5%: $159,619
Top 10%: $113,799
Top 25%: $67,280
Top 50%: >$33,048
Block lease with a stable charter operator. For private use there is no tax angle to fractional.
Or a 1/6th share in a CJ with a shared pilot.
As was mentioned, bizjets are no fun anyway. No more than an appliance. So I might as well make it safe and choose NetJets when I travel in the 0.1%.
For fun, a small plane.
I think some people don't realize how low the threshold for being in the 1% is, and how much to operate a jet costs.
Based on the Internal Revenue Service’s 2010-2014 database below, here’s how much the top Americans make:
Top 1%: $380,354
Ahhh... But fractionals generally offer a charter card option just for that purpose.
Thats for the people who need a 'QS' in the tail number so they can pretend to roll with the fractional crowd.
I bet OP is thinking "man I should of just put if money were no object"
I would go directly for a Boeing 757..