cfd408
Pre-Flight
I'm looking to join a club based out of KAPA - Centennial, Colorado. If anyone knows of a club that is open to a new member, please forward contact information and details.
I'm open to any situation that would make it more affordable to fly on a regular basis. I haven't checked the KAPA website for list of companies.. thanks for the idea.Do you want a member-managed club or a for-profit company that has the word "club" in its name?
Have you checked the list of companies and groups on the KAPA website?
Aspen flying club is amazing. But it's really just a rental outfit with a monthly fee. Huge selection of planes though, and partner rental outfits across the Denver metro.I'm open to any situation that would make it more affordable to fly on a regular basis. I haven't checked the KAPA website for list of companies.. thanks for the idea.
That's what I meant with the phrase "for profit company with the word club in it"Aspen flying club is amazing. But it's really just a rental outfit with a monthly fee. Huge selection of planes though, and partner rental outfits across the Denver metro.
I eventually left AFC for a club (ownership stake) based out of KFLY. If you can find something like that in the metro area you would be golden.
Aspen is still there.. but as Murphey pointed out..Pretty sure aspen flying club is still there
Aspen flying club is amazing. But it's really just a rental outfit with a monthly fee. Huge selection of planes though, and partner rental outfits across the Denver metro.
Would you mind sharing some issues that you had there, John? I recently moved up here and am looking at them for a bunch of training (mountain flying, commercial), as well as ongoing rentals. Always good to know where the bodies are buried!
I was told the other SR22 they had caught fire, fortunately on the ground.
Aspen bought Western air flying academy at BJC and I have nothing but positives to say about Aspen during my time there. Western has greatly improved under Aspen's ownership, atleast as I can tell by being a patron. The only negative I have is when I asked the chief pilot of Aspen (not Western, Jackie is fantastic) about permission for flying to a (HUGE, well kept) dirt runway he was a pretty huge dick and acted like no airplane had ever landed off asphalt before. This sure peeved me as I have quite a bit of experience not just landing on unimproved runways but landing off airport. Anyway, that probably doesn't apply to you and I've thoroughly enjoyed Aspen at BJC.Definitely leery of Aspen now, though.
Nothing but positive things to say about AFC. No buy-in, $35/month dues, very good wet rates. Many aircraft, several different mfgs, online scheduling through a Flight Scheduler Pro. Most small “clubs” are just incorporated partial ownerships with moderate to high buy-in costs and hourly rates for maintenance, engine reserve, etc, plus fuel, that rival or exceed AFC’s wet rates. Anyone who had any issues with them probably has a legitimate gripe, just as anyone (like me) who raves about them probably has a legitimate amount of great experiences with them. That’s just the way the world works.
I have witnessed, more than once, pilots returning aircraft that they insisted they fueled up at other airports but forgot the receipts, and DEMANDED they be credited for the fuel without proof of number of gallons or cost. Unreasonable. More reasonable = “I will get my receipt or card statement and bring it in for credit later, tomorrow, next time, via email, fax, etc.” Nope. Renter says “NOW!!!”
Personal ownership is nice, but AFC is great in my opinion. Take it with whatever view you choose. Put it this way: we moved 1800 miles away 1.5 yrs ago and I miss AFC every time I want to go flying and can’t rent anything nearby. Nearest rental is almost an hour away and is a solitary old 172 for $150/hr wet. Plus fees. So many fees...
Step 1: Buy itThat said, I found a ‘61 C150A that I like, it’s affordable, in great shape, in annual, 300 hours on a recently rebuilt engine, and a STOL kit. Maybe I should start my own club of one. Someone please tell me to just buy it and fly it...
My membership ended 9/20/16 when we moved from CO. I guess things have changed. Too many people in Colorado now. I’m sure that’s a large part of it.
Too much CFI hiring to airlines and other gigs. They’ve probably turned over the entire staff other than the long-timers there three times by now if you left Sept of 16. Definitely twice if not three.
Most instructors here right now will tell any new students who call and ask availability that they’re booked solid into June. That’s the other piece. It’s not really more people in Denver as the root cause although that’s part of it... it’s the mad rush to get hired by airlines and other flying jobs and all the mobility happening in the pilot job space right now.
The little school I was working with is doing multiple 100 hours on three aircraft with really only two full time instructors and a few who rent occasionally from them to do one-off ratings.
When times were a littlw harder for instructors they’d pay attention to the business side of things in their down time. I don’t know any instructors who have any if they don’t want to have any here right now.
ATP in that same timeframe since you left has an entire fleet of 172s and Seminoles parked behind TacAir now. All flying.
We’re not DVT yet but it’s not uncommon for the pattern to grow on the “touch and go runway” to six or seven during any particular one hour Hobbs stint in good weather.
Even FTG has two “schools” operating now. I remember (and you probably do too) when they could barely rent enough airplanes to survive. The eastward move of the city is helping them there.
I remember FTG being a ghostown, yes. Sounds like some positive changes for the popularity of GA. APA could get pretty busy in the pattern back in 2015 when I first soloed. I can remember being one of seven in closed traffic more than once. It was actually great experience. I think if you learn to fly out of APA you can fly just about anywhere. I can hardly imagine the wait to take off. I’ve been number 8-9 for the active many times on busy days. I’d usually use take off on 10 and land 28 whenever I was leaving the pattern.
The wait sucks if you hit the timing wrong. I run up at C1 and after run up and call completely ready to go all the way to the runway nowadays so I don’t have to taxi to the north or south run up areas and get stuck there, and always hope for winds that’ll allow a 10 departure for us Area Hotel folk and maybe even a 28 return if I can.
Of course you know it does me no good if I ask for crash and dash.... then it’s always a 35R or 17L departure. They typically won’t circle you around to the other side from 10.
The way to alleviate that is to go do airwork first. Depart 10, airwork southeast, and return later for crash and dash on 35L or 17R.
If it’s 17R you’ll get told to follow Parker Road until there’s a gap to shoot you into and often you’ll be at the north end of the reservoir before you’re turned west to cross over and join in the fray. If 35L, it’ll be “fly west, report crossing I-25” and then they’ll turn you into any gaps in the pattern as a straight in.
I would happily work 8am-2pm at Our Favorite Place as the Ops/Admin person, handling the calls & the paperwork. (sorry, I'm not giving up my teaching job at the university) I'm not even that expensive. Marketing isn't an issue there, but keeping up with the logistics is the real crunch. If I can run a $$ multi-million chunk of a multi-billion $$$ DOD program, this will be fun!The stories I keep hearing about all the local clubs (I won’t call them schools, there’s very few actual schools or places trying to operate like schools...) is they’re horrid at returning phone calls, people make appointments to talk to an instructor and when they show up no instructors are anywhere to be found, and they ALL generally suck at customer service.
Mentioned this to a buddy who works at one of them and his response was, “I give my direct cell to all my students. They all know the front desk is useless. We book the airplanes online, never through the desk.” In other words, cultural and he’s not even going to bother to tell anyone because they won’t fix it.
Was joking with @Clark1961 last night on the phone that there’s a business opportunity here for a school that will actually operate like a school and actually have a front desk person, return calls at set times, keep appointments with prospective pilots, etc... and then doing nothing but teaching.
But of course the reality is you’d go broke capitalizing it and getting the aircraft on leaseback or purchasing them.
And the other reality is if you’re looking for that, ATP expanded into Denver, for whatever that’s worth.
The folks I trained with are a small school-only place and not really a rental place, but with the current hiring climate and such, they need about three more full time instructors, a single engine retract, and a little more work on the voice mail messages and stuff to make it clear they’re a busy shop and call backs will be made at particular hours. I think they’re also looking for another 172 leaseback.
But they’re still 100% better than most folks are telling me the big clubs in Denver are behaving right now. At least on the customer contact side if these businesses.
It’s a given that CFIs are busy in the current hiring climate, but hiring a full time front desk person who can actually BOOK a CFI to be standing there when a prospective student walks in on a Tuesday, would be a start.
I suspect part of that is the CFI knows they’re not getting paid to do that and most have a full schedule of students in these “non-lean” times nowadays so the motivation to work prospects is very low. Not an insignificant number also have other jobs where they make the money to actually pay their rent, too. But that’s a whole different topic.
That second school at FTG (actually, the first one) isn't really doing anything. Only 1 or 2 instructors willing to be based there, the others from Aspen don't want to drive up there. One of the instructors is full-time working on his MS in engineering at CU-Denver, and really doesn't have the time. The first school is an escape from the original school, when Aspen bought them. Original owner took the money & ran, took 3 experienced instructors with him and opened up the new school. Organizationally, they look the same - monthly fee, similar Ops manual, similar fees, monthly get-together, etc.Too much CFI hiring to airlines and other gigs. They’ve probably turned over the entire staff other than the long-timers there three times by now if you left Sept of 16. Definitely twice if not three.
Most instructors here right now will tell any new students who call and ask availability that they’re booked solid into June. That’s the other piece. It’s not really more people in Denver as the root cause although that’s part of it... it’s the mad rush to get hired by airlines and other flying jobs and all the mobility happening in the pilot job space right now.
The little school I was working with is doing multiple 100 hours on three aircraft with really only two full time instructors and a few who rent occasionally from them to do one-off ratings.
When times were a littlw harder for instructors they’d pay attention to the business side of things in their down time. I don’t know any instructors who have any if they don’t want to have any here right now.
ATP in that same timeframe since you left has an entire fleet of 172s and Seminoles parked behind TacAir now. All flying.
We’re not DVT yet but it’s not uncommon for the pattern to grow on the “touch and go runway” to six or seven during any particular one hour Hobbs stint in good weather.
Even FTG has two “schools” operating now. I remember (and you probably do too) when they could barely rent enough airplanes to survive. The eastward move of the city is helping them there.
They've also been looking for another 172 for years - Bev asked if I knew of one long time ago. It's really a continuing need.
That second school at FTG (actually, the first one) isn't really doing anything. Only 1 or 2 instructors willing to be based there, the others from Aspen don't want to drive up there. One of the instructors is full-time working on his MS in engineering at CU-Denver, and really doesn't have the time. The first school is an escape from the original school, when Aspen bought them. Original owner took the money & ran, took 3 experienced instructors with him and opened up the new school. Organizationally, they look the same - monthly fee, similar Ops manual, similar fees, monthly get-together, etc.