Jay Honeck
Touchdown! Greaser!
http://macsblog.com/2012/06/is-ga-transportation-flying-dead/
You generally don't read stuff like this from Mac (or any of the other paid GA writer) since this is the LAST thing any aircraft manufacturer wants to publicize.
In my opinion, Mac's only stating the obvious. Compared to the airlines, it now costs double or even triple to fly my 160 mph airplane to the East or West coasts from South Texas -- and that's just for the fuel alone. If you factor in the other costs of aircraft owning, it can be a 400% penalty for flying your own plane.
Other than Oshkosh, which is an epic 3000 mile, multi-day round trip for us each year, we simply don't use Atlas for transportation beyond about 300 nm anymore. This is a far cry from "the olden days" (all of 10 years ago), when we routinely hopped in the plane and flew off to points all over North America.
Part of it is that we're no longer transporting four people everywhere. The fuel cost when divided by four of us looked a lot better than when we only divide it by 2 or 3 people.
It's sad, but IMHO until avgas comes down from the stratosphere, the "new normal" is a reality that is not conducive to/for personal air travel for any but the extremely wealthy.
Which, in turn, means that GA will continue it's slow downward spiral...
You generally don't read stuff like this from Mac (or any of the other paid GA writer) since this is the LAST thing any aircraft manufacturer wants to publicize.
In my opinion, Mac's only stating the obvious. Compared to the airlines, it now costs double or even triple to fly my 160 mph airplane to the East or West coasts from South Texas -- and that's just for the fuel alone. If you factor in the other costs of aircraft owning, it can be a 400% penalty for flying your own plane.
Other than Oshkosh, which is an epic 3000 mile, multi-day round trip for us each year, we simply don't use Atlas for transportation beyond about 300 nm anymore. This is a far cry from "the olden days" (all of 10 years ago), when we routinely hopped in the plane and flew off to points all over North America.
Part of it is that we're no longer transporting four people everywhere. The fuel cost when divided by four of us looked a lot better than when we only divide it by 2 or 3 people.
It's sad, but IMHO until avgas comes down from the stratosphere, the "new normal" is a reality that is not conducive to/for personal air travel for any but the extremely wealthy.
Which, in turn, means that GA will continue it's slow downward spiral...