Vince R
Pre-takeoff checklist
[Apologies in advance for the verbose post...]
I need to vent a bit...I've been trying to purchase an airplane for over a year, and I've been frustrated at every step of the way.
My requirements are basic: take a 450 pound payload 500 miles at 160+ knots in a reasonably modern airplane that's not a "project" or one that's likely to need something major in the first few years.
I've shopped 182's (mostly RGs), Trinidads, Arrows, Saratogas, Cirrus and Bonanzas. I've spoken to more brokers than I can count, and sent dozens of emails to advertisers - most of whom rarely bother to reply. I belong to the type clubs for all of the breeds of plane I like, and I watch the "For Sale" postings on these sites like a hawk.
I've been close on four occasions - and I've made offers on two of these. Both have gone poorly. My most recent attempt was a nice F33A Bonanza...I spent two days and a thousand bucks going to see it, liked what I saw, told the owner I'd be making an offer - and had an initial offer for 92% of his asking price in his hands within 24 hours. He goes dark on me for two days and after I start calling his cell, I get a one-line email "I decided to sell to someone else". No discussions or negotiations, just "no thanks". If he had another buyer in the wings, he couldn't have told me that before I spent the time and money to go see it?
Add to this frustration the task of finding hangar space. There are three suitable airports within an hour drive of me, and none seem to have an inch of space available. At my local airport (KSUT), there are about 100 people ahead of me on the hangar waiting list, and I don't think it's moved since I joined. The reality is that whatever I buy will likely spend a lot of time baking in the nice salty North Carolina coastal air, and that's a whole different frustration.
I'm not a kid (late 50's) and I've been in business long enough that I think I know how to negotiate and close a transaction. I'm not a perfectionist - I'm more than happy with "good enough", and I fully expect to spend some money getting my plane setup like I want it. I don't need financing, and I don't feel like I'm trying to squeeze every penny out of the sellers I've spoken to. I just want to spend a little money, get a plane, and find somewhere to keep it. I kinda thought that the hard part would be making the commitment to spend the money - now I see that's just the tip of the iceberg.
I really hope some of you might point out a few tips and tricks I'd never think of. Or, if it's just a case that this is all par for the course, well, maybe it would be reassuring to know that too. Of course, I don't rule out that maybe I'm just being an idiot and going through things totally the wrong way...don't be shy - at this point, I'd even like to know that!
I need to vent a bit...I've been trying to purchase an airplane for over a year, and I've been frustrated at every step of the way.
My requirements are basic: take a 450 pound payload 500 miles at 160+ knots in a reasonably modern airplane that's not a "project" or one that's likely to need something major in the first few years.
I've shopped 182's (mostly RGs), Trinidads, Arrows, Saratogas, Cirrus and Bonanzas. I've spoken to more brokers than I can count, and sent dozens of emails to advertisers - most of whom rarely bother to reply. I belong to the type clubs for all of the breeds of plane I like, and I watch the "For Sale" postings on these sites like a hawk.
I've been close on four occasions - and I've made offers on two of these. Both have gone poorly. My most recent attempt was a nice F33A Bonanza...I spent two days and a thousand bucks going to see it, liked what I saw, told the owner I'd be making an offer - and had an initial offer for 92% of his asking price in his hands within 24 hours. He goes dark on me for two days and after I start calling his cell, I get a one-line email "I decided to sell to someone else". No discussions or negotiations, just "no thanks". If he had another buyer in the wings, he couldn't have told me that before I spent the time and money to go see it?
Add to this frustration the task of finding hangar space. There are three suitable airports within an hour drive of me, and none seem to have an inch of space available. At my local airport (KSUT), there are about 100 people ahead of me on the hangar waiting list, and I don't think it's moved since I joined. The reality is that whatever I buy will likely spend a lot of time baking in the nice salty North Carolina coastal air, and that's a whole different frustration.
I'm not a kid (late 50's) and I've been in business long enough that I think I know how to negotiate and close a transaction. I'm not a perfectionist - I'm more than happy with "good enough", and I fully expect to spend some money getting my plane setup like I want it. I don't need financing, and I don't feel like I'm trying to squeeze every penny out of the sellers I've spoken to. I just want to spend a little money, get a plane, and find somewhere to keep it. I kinda thought that the hard part would be making the commitment to spend the money - now I see that's just the tip of the iceberg.
I really hope some of you might point out a few tips and tricks I'd never think of. Or, if it's just a case that this is all par for the course, well, maybe it would be reassuring to know that too. Of course, I don't rule out that maybe I'm just being an idiot and going through things totally the wrong way...don't be shy - at this point, I'd even like to know that!