Scoobysmak
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2015
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Scoobysmak
Well thanks for having me. After doing tons of research and probably more dreaming I need would like some honest opinions from people that are currently in general aviation.
About me: I am currently a ground walker and have not even looked into flight schools to get a PPL. If I did get a PPL I would try and obtain IFR since I would not like weather to hold me back (of course sometimes the weather can ground anyone/any plane). I would eventually like to own my own aircraft but would like to think I have all the cost narrowed down but I am sure there is something I will leave out. I would prefer to buy a plane that I want to keep for a long time as well but there are a few complications it seems to do this.
As of this moment my flying would be done for my enjoyment and travel. This past Thanksgiving weekend I drove to relatives homes and spent about 30 hours total in the car. Needless to say the family was worn out by the time Sunday night came around. The wife and kid helped put everything away and went to bed. I calculated it and I would have only spent around 8-9 hours in the air for the entire trip with 185 kt GS with no wind. Fuel would have been more costly but I will assume a hanger or tie-down fee would have been way cheaper than the hotels I paid for enroute. I would have saved time and my sanity as well. The other fact to owning my own aircraft is TSA will not get the chance to "fondle" me as much.
I have the possibility that once a month I will need to travel 450 Nmile for bussiness. I can schedule for good weather but will have to fly all 12 months of the year. These trips for bussiness currently would be from middle TN to south/mid FL. My vacation travels I expect to take me normally in the lower 48 but Alaska and depending on the plane might try an England experience.
I have been told the best way to get your PPL is purchase a 150 or similar trainer and contact a CFI. You can get "burned" if the plane you purchase needs more repairs to make it flight worthy than what might have been found on a pre-buy. Overall the limiting time factor is your CFI schedule and yours. After you have your PPL then load up the hours and train and get more experince. Once you get your VFR then find another plane if yours is not IFR worthy. I guess this might be the norm but hate to buy something I know I won't keep.
I would love to own a plane that got 200kts on 8 gph and had 1500 lbs of useful load. Needless to say that plane doesn't exist or its way above my budget. I will normally fly either alone if on bussiness but if on vaction the family would be along for the flight. If its a family event I would prefer to have 750 lbs in usefull load plus fuel for a 4 hr flight (I doubt the wife could make it much further anyway). The trend here seemed to be efficency while flying fast, this lead me to Mooney's. I like the J model but really like the K model for its ablity to fly above weather if needed. Some other advantages to this are smoother air, better tail wind (hopefully tailwind), and higher speeds. The disadvantage is wearing O2 above 12,500. I don't know if the family would like it but it wouldn't bother me. The other disadvantage is higher maint cost due to turbo/turbo-nomalizer.
The other option I looked at was the Vans RV-10. This would give lower annuals and probably lower insurance cost since it doesn't have retracts. I would really love it deltahawk actually produced its diesel engine they have been working on for decades at this point. Not sure if deltahawk will produce an STC for a Mooney but I would have to find a plane with a worn out engine. The reason for me to like the diesel is I know fuel will be around and sold everywhere. I am not sure what 100LL will be in ten years, maybe a work around but something tells me it won't be very cheap.
If I decied to take the GA opportunity I would probably spend about 225-275k on a plane (not a trainer one I would keep). I would expect to spend about 15k getting my PPL with IFR. Annual cost will depend more on the plane but hanger fees will probably be the same for all unless it doesn't fit in a normal hanger (not likely on my budget). Say $300 a month for hanger fees, $2000-$3000 for an annual if nothing is wrong. If something needs fixed prepair for the bill. At first insurance will be higher but say $2500 a year for ball park figure. Not sure how much a medical will cost, if the new bill passes then might make this a one time event. I would expect to give a rough estimate of $100 per hour to fly until I have built up enough emergency funds to support an engine overhaul 3x over. Is there something I am overlooking in my cost estimate, my only thoughts might be some form of registration renewal but have not found this anywhere, does this depend on the state if I need to factor this in.
I can reduce this some if I elect the RV-10 route, the annual will be way less. Insurance can be a moving target so I won't really adjust this number much but probably a bit lower.
Is there any advantage to owning a certified aircraft Vs building a kit besides being allowed to fly in Japan and one other country (can't remember it). I probably would never try to be an airplane taxi but I could see maybe some sort of charity flying (think flight for paws comes to mind, think that is the name). Are there any other aircraft you would look at in my shoes. I looked briefly at the piper PA-24-260TC but didn't even find any for sale. Which brings up another question, flying from TN to FL would a turbo even help me. I tried to look at the winds aloft to see but really didn't get a handle on it and better to ask someone that routinely flies this. About the only thing I am sure of is if I flew across the rockies I would be thankful I had it.
I know this was a full post of questions and most of it probably would be answered if I had my PPL but since I don't just getting a feel for it. If you have any questions to make suggestions let me know.
Thanks for reading.
About me: I am currently a ground walker and have not even looked into flight schools to get a PPL. If I did get a PPL I would try and obtain IFR since I would not like weather to hold me back (of course sometimes the weather can ground anyone/any plane). I would eventually like to own my own aircraft but would like to think I have all the cost narrowed down but I am sure there is something I will leave out. I would prefer to buy a plane that I want to keep for a long time as well but there are a few complications it seems to do this.
As of this moment my flying would be done for my enjoyment and travel. This past Thanksgiving weekend I drove to relatives homes and spent about 30 hours total in the car. Needless to say the family was worn out by the time Sunday night came around. The wife and kid helped put everything away and went to bed. I calculated it and I would have only spent around 8-9 hours in the air for the entire trip with 185 kt GS with no wind. Fuel would have been more costly but I will assume a hanger or tie-down fee would have been way cheaper than the hotels I paid for enroute. I would have saved time and my sanity as well. The other fact to owning my own aircraft is TSA will not get the chance to "fondle" me as much.
I have the possibility that once a month I will need to travel 450 Nmile for bussiness. I can schedule for good weather but will have to fly all 12 months of the year. These trips for bussiness currently would be from middle TN to south/mid FL. My vacation travels I expect to take me normally in the lower 48 but Alaska and depending on the plane might try an England experience.
I have been told the best way to get your PPL is purchase a 150 or similar trainer and contact a CFI. You can get "burned" if the plane you purchase needs more repairs to make it flight worthy than what might have been found on a pre-buy. Overall the limiting time factor is your CFI schedule and yours. After you have your PPL then load up the hours and train and get more experince. Once you get your VFR then find another plane if yours is not IFR worthy. I guess this might be the norm but hate to buy something I know I won't keep.
I would love to own a plane that got 200kts on 8 gph and had 1500 lbs of useful load. Needless to say that plane doesn't exist or its way above my budget. I will normally fly either alone if on bussiness but if on vaction the family would be along for the flight. If its a family event I would prefer to have 750 lbs in usefull load plus fuel for a 4 hr flight (I doubt the wife could make it much further anyway). The trend here seemed to be efficency while flying fast, this lead me to Mooney's. I like the J model but really like the K model for its ablity to fly above weather if needed. Some other advantages to this are smoother air, better tail wind (hopefully tailwind), and higher speeds. The disadvantage is wearing O2 above 12,500. I don't know if the family would like it but it wouldn't bother me. The other disadvantage is higher maint cost due to turbo/turbo-nomalizer.
The other option I looked at was the Vans RV-10. This would give lower annuals and probably lower insurance cost since it doesn't have retracts. I would really love it deltahawk actually produced its diesel engine they have been working on for decades at this point. Not sure if deltahawk will produce an STC for a Mooney but I would have to find a plane with a worn out engine. The reason for me to like the diesel is I know fuel will be around and sold everywhere. I am not sure what 100LL will be in ten years, maybe a work around but something tells me it won't be very cheap.
If I decied to take the GA opportunity I would probably spend about 225-275k on a plane (not a trainer one I would keep). I would expect to spend about 15k getting my PPL with IFR. Annual cost will depend more on the plane but hanger fees will probably be the same for all unless it doesn't fit in a normal hanger (not likely on my budget). Say $300 a month for hanger fees, $2000-$3000 for an annual if nothing is wrong. If something needs fixed prepair for the bill. At first insurance will be higher but say $2500 a year for ball park figure. Not sure how much a medical will cost, if the new bill passes then might make this a one time event. I would expect to give a rough estimate of $100 per hour to fly until I have built up enough emergency funds to support an engine overhaul 3x over. Is there something I am overlooking in my cost estimate, my only thoughts might be some form of registration renewal but have not found this anywhere, does this depend on the state if I need to factor this in.
I can reduce this some if I elect the RV-10 route, the annual will be way less. Insurance can be a moving target so I won't really adjust this number much but probably a bit lower.
Is there any advantage to owning a certified aircraft Vs building a kit besides being allowed to fly in Japan and one other country (can't remember it). I probably would never try to be an airplane taxi but I could see maybe some sort of charity flying (think flight for paws comes to mind, think that is the name). Are there any other aircraft you would look at in my shoes. I looked briefly at the piper PA-24-260TC but didn't even find any for sale. Which brings up another question, flying from TN to FL would a turbo even help me. I tried to look at the winds aloft to see but really didn't get a handle on it and better to ask someone that routinely flies this. About the only thing I am sure of is if I flew across the rockies I would be thankful I had it.
I know this was a full post of questions and most of it probably would be answered if I had my PPL but since I don't just getting a feel for it. If you have any questions to make suggestions let me know.
Thanks for reading.
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