PlanningForWings
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Nov 17, 2017
- Messages
- 6
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PlanningForWings
Good afternoon any and all! I apologize in advance if any of this is stuff that's been gone over a hundred thousand times here; if there is some resource that I neglected to look through before posting, please don't hesitate to point me in that direction.
So to start, I am not a pilot; I am not (yet) even a student. However, I have always wanted to become one, and things in my life are moving to the point where I could make this happen, and I wanted to see what the pilot community thinks of my potentially hair-brained idea.
I recently started a business with my wife, and it has been very successful. One concession that I got from creating her shop for her was that I would get to learn to fly once the business "took off." The business is doing so well, it actually looks like after this winter, I could have enough saved up to buy a plane, take a sabbatical at my job, and go full time into flight training and who knows where from there.
I want to fly for a few reasons, but first because it's awesome; I've flown a Cessna 172RG for about an hour and one landing as a birthday present a few years back, and I have wanted nothing more than to get back into the cockpit ever since (and I bought a full simulator setup and have been using it often to try and recreate that experience). Secondly, I want to own an airplane capable of moderate cross-country journeys to see family. As I'm in the Pacific NW, just being 'one major city' away is several hours by car and still a couple by small aircraft, but it would be a blast to fly down to Portland to see my sister or be able to bring her and her hubby up to hang out with us in Seattle. Third, if I could find employment in the flight world, that would be a dream come true; I would really like to be able to be a CFI at some point.
So, with our business doing so well, I was going to buy a plane and train in that plane. I could buy a Cessna 150 for $30k and hire a CFI to train me in that aircraft, but then I'm stuck with a 150 and I don't really want that airplane. So I was thinking instead to save a little longer, and buy the plane that I want to keep, at least for the short term. So if I save closer to $80k, I could buy a Debonair, a Sierra, or an M20, something with 4 usable seats, decent speed, and range to get to Roseburg, OR from Seattle. I realize I would need to have probably $500-800 per month set aside for hangar, maintenance, etc. and that should be no issue.
Buying a complex airplane seems like it comes with complex problems, though. From everything I've read, there's nothing regulatory preventing me from training in a complex plane, but finding an instructor willing to take me on would be more difficult (?) and insurance would be a pain.
Are these issues going to be that difficult to overcome? Is this something I should just dump the idea and rent from a flight school like most people do?
So the next question is, where do I go from there? Obviously if I want to become a CFI I'll need to work on several additional ratings and the CPL; I'm not certain my wife would be willing to totally support us both via her baby business while I do nothing but pay flight instructors to teach me things that I may never find a job doing. What do most CFIs spend their intermediate time between getting that first PPL and getting certified without going totally broke?
Any thoughts, insights, or recommendations will be greatly welcomed.
So to start, I am not a pilot; I am not (yet) even a student. However, I have always wanted to become one, and things in my life are moving to the point where I could make this happen, and I wanted to see what the pilot community thinks of my potentially hair-brained idea.
I recently started a business with my wife, and it has been very successful. One concession that I got from creating her shop for her was that I would get to learn to fly once the business "took off." The business is doing so well, it actually looks like after this winter, I could have enough saved up to buy a plane, take a sabbatical at my job, and go full time into flight training and who knows where from there.
I want to fly for a few reasons, but first because it's awesome; I've flown a Cessna 172RG for about an hour and one landing as a birthday present a few years back, and I have wanted nothing more than to get back into the cockpit ever since (and I bought a full simulator setup and have been using it often to try and recreate that experience). Secondly, I want to own an airplane capable of moderate cross-country journeys to see family. As I'm in the Pacific NW, just being 'one major city' away is several hours by car and still a couple by small aircraft, but it would be a blast to fly down to Portland to see my sister or be able to bring her and her hubby up to hang out with us in Seattle. Third, if I could find employment in the flight world, that would be a dream come true; I would really like to be able to be a CFI at some point.
So, with our business doing so well, I was going to buy a plane and train in that plane. I could buy a Cessna 150 for $30k and hire a CFI to train me in that aircraft, but then I'm stuck with a 150 and I don't really want that airplane. So I was thinking instead to save a little longer, and buy the plane that I want to keep, at least for the short term. So if I save closer to $80k, I could buy a Debonair, a Sierra, or an M20, something with 4 usable seats, decent speed, and range to get to Roseburg, OR from Seattle. I realize I would need to have probably $500-800 per month set aside for hangar, maintenance, etc. and that should be no issue.
Buying a complex airplane seems like it comes with complex problems, though. From everything I've read, there's nothing regulatory preventing me from training in a complex plane, but finding an instructor willing to take me on would be more difficult (?) and insurance would be a pain.
Are these issues going to be that difficult to overcome? Is this something I should just dump the idea and rent from a flight school like most people do?
So the next question is, where do I go from there? Obviously if I want to become a CFI I'll need to work on several additional ratings and the CPL; I'm not certain my wife would be willing to totally support us both via her baby business while I do nothing but pay flight instructors to teach me things that I may never find a job doing. What do most CFIs spend their intermediate time between getting that first PPL and getting certified without going totally broke?
Any thoughts, insights, or recommendations will be greatly welcomed.