There seems to be numerous factors working against GA: skyrocketing operating costs; decreasing numbers of licensed pilots; closing airports; and the ever present threat of banning LL gas. At what point does the used plane market collapse?
I hope so.
I've got my eye on a couple of different planes.....
There seems to be numerous factors working against GA: skyrocketing operating costs; decreasing numbers of licensed pilots; closing airports; and the ever present threat of banning LL gas. At what point does the used plane market collapse?
The attrition rate of planes, accidents, neglect death, matches the declining pilot population. Everything is in perfect balance.
I gotta agree with Geico that most of the regular old GA stuff deserves to die. Throw public airports in the same dumpster. If we didn't have junky old cheap airplanes and crap public airports Muricans might actually build cool flying stuff. Just like when aviation was growing.
This is what "Muricans" don't see. Have you guys been to SnF, Sebring, OSH to see what aircraft are being produced in the EU? Sport Cruiser, TL Sting, Pantera, Sinus, Virus, Cavalon, and on and on?
We don't have the capacity to design and build small planes under the burdensome certified regulations here. This is why sport pilot and experimentals are thriving. Less regulations and more innovation, and more fun!
The SLSA RV-12 is certainly the exception to the rule as the regulations for LSA have been a breath of fresh air. They are being made in "Murica".
Most will no longer be flying in a decade or two, and young people with the same passion for aviation are few and far between.
EU ( Europe) has "less" regulation of aviation then the US????
Not just aviation. Youth today aren't really into vehicles of any kind. Why drive/travel when you can text, tweet, facebook, facetime, skype...
How are they design and producing more and better GA aircraft? More regulation?
I don't think the blame lies with technology. I think kids don't drive because it is friggin expensive(insurance, not cars) and 'regulation' bunch of discriminatory no phone rules all the way up to 19, plus the kids are revenue targets from traffic tickets. I'd be happy if I could never drive again.Not just aviation. Youth today aren't really into vehicles of any kind. Why drive/travel when you can text, tweet, facebook, facetime, skype...
They probably have more regulation, what they lack is piles of junky old airplanes to feed the demand/be competition for new stuff.Well you tell me, I think the flaw is in your basic assumption that, " they are doing a better job designing, producing new, interesting airplane, therefore, they MUST not have more regulations then the US, because we all know that it's REGULATION that destroys innovation".
I don't know the answer, but the fact is they have more regulation of GA then the US does.... go to England and pull your airplane out for a quick VFR flight for a £100 hamburger....you have to file a flight plan and pay fees for the take-off, landing, and flight plan...
I don't think the blame lies with technology. I think kids don't drive because it is friggin expensive(insurance, not cars) and 'regulation' bunch of discriminatory no phone rules all the way up to 19, plus the kids are revenue targets from traffic tickets. I'd be happy if I could never drive again.
I'd be happy if I could never drive again.
I have been watching Debonair prices slowly decline. I thought I got a good deal last year, but I'm thinking of selling before it gets any worse.
Well you tell me, I think the flaw is in your basic assumption that, " they are doing a better job designing, producing new, interesting airplane, therefore, they MUST not have more regulations then the US, because we all know that it's REGULATION that destroys innovation".
I don't know the answer, but the fact is they have more regulation of GA then the US does.... go to England and pull your airplane out for a quick VFR flight for a £100 hamburger....you have to file a flight plan and pay fees for the take-off, landing, and flight plan...
Just take a good look at the average age of attendees at Oshkosh or Sun 'n' Fun.
Most will no longer be flying in a decade or two, and young people with the same passion for aviation are few and far between.
Not just aviation. Youth today aren't really into vehicles of any kind.
Just take a good look at the average age of attendees at Oshkosh or Sun 'n' Fun.
Most will no longer be flying in a decade or two, and young people with the same passion for aviation are few and far between.
As an aside, the same demographics were in evidence at an RV show we attended in Tampa in January.
Dwindling demand can only have one long term effect on any market.
The young ones with the resources to operate an aircraft typically don't have the time to take a week off and sit in a lawn chair in Lakeland. I find the shows painfully boring. Most everyone I know that owns a plane and flys are under 40. The only ones I know of that will be attending SnF this year are over 40.
....For now I am limited to the weekend / day trips.
The young ones with the resources to operate an aircraft typically don't have the time to take a week off and sit in a lawn chair in Lakeland. I find the shows painfully boring. Most everyone I know that owns a plane and flys are under 40. The only ones I know of that will be attending SnF this year are over 40.
We should scrap a lot more planes and bring the fleet up to at least the 80's..
Yeah, I agree, my '58 model with only 3200 hours, a tight airframe (zero smoking rivets), absolutely no corrosion and about 85% showroom condition should be tossed in the scrap yard tomorrow.
I know several people who have bought or are looking to buy in the next few months. All experimentals.
I gotta agree with Geico that most of the regular old GA stuff deserves to die. Throw public airports in the same dumpster.
RV prices especially, have been going up lately too.
2 Years ago when I bought my RV-6 I thought I paid about $5K too much for it, according to what similar RV-6s were fetching on the market back then, but mine was in pristine condition, with excellent build quality, and had only 250 hours on the hobbs, plus I personally know the builder and watched the plane being built. Now it's got over 400 hours on it and I've been offered $10K more than I paid for it if I wanted to sell it today... that's really tempting, but I think I'd rather keep and fly the plane for a while longer while I can still manage to do it.
How are they designing and producing more and better GA aircraft? More regulation?
Man, Dan Bernath did a lot to further your argument for you.EU aviation is highly regulated, but they don't have the litigious society we do, so the liability costs are way lower. Tort reform would make a major difference for us.