us AAirways
Line Up and Wait
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- Dec 28, 2012
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us AAirways
Not a good thing,hate to see a major manufacturer discontinue a training aircraft.
Give the IP to their chinese subcontractor, give them the hint how to fix what needs to be fixed and see them come back on the market at a fraction of the price. For 60k, the thing would sell.
Give the IP to their chinese subcontractor, give them the hint how to fix what needs to be fixed and see them come back on the market at a fraction of the price. For 60k, the thing would sell.
No one else has been able to build an LSA at that price, why would this be any different?
No one else has been able to build an LSA at that price, why would this be any different?
Yawn. Cessna did the whole Light Sport movement a big injustice with the Skycatcher. Anyone remember them boosting of 1000 airplanes sold? And how all the Cessna Training Centers would have one? Meanwhile there were several good aircraft available that didn't have the Cessna name. The Light Sport movement would have been far better served with pilots and students buying SportStars and CTSWs.
I wonder how long before they stop building the $400k 172s?
I knew it was doomed when they decided to go with a 0-200 instead of the lighter Rotax. Cessna Service Centers won that battle, but lost the war. With the additional weight they were hamstringed with very basic and blah interiors.
I knew it was doomed when they decided to go with a 0-200
Like the ill-fated recreational license, most of the rest go into the regular private pilot curriculum.
It's not universally true. NM Sport Aviation reports an even breakdown of Sport and Private students. They fly two Remos GX airplanes, mostly (they also have 2 leasebacks: an SP eligible Ercoupe and a 150 Aerobat -- but before the 150 they taught all their Private students in the GX).
I only passed Private because it was before NMSP opened and there was no Sport instruction anywhere near. Since then I talked to many people who were strong-armed into Private by the old and crusty aviation establishment, and I am sure that quite a few gave up because of that.
I still don't understand the advantage to going SP for someone with no medical issues.
I have a feeling these will get cheap, and soon.
I wonder how long before they stop building the $400k 172s?
Not having to spend money on a medical.
Not having to worry.
Less required initial training.
I still don't understand the advantage to going SP for someone with no medical issues.
I for one am unsurprised. The fit and finish of those things sucked in my opinion. And why bother getting one of those when you could get an RV12 for the same money and do that much more?
The factory-built RV-12 only happened after the collapse of Skycatcher. However, it was possibly to buy a CTLS for less money than 162. It's just that some dinosaurs were dead-seat on lumping the dead weight of O-200. If it were good for Cub, it should've been good for anyone.And why bother getting one of those when you could get an RV12 for the same money and do that much more?
I still don't understand the advantage to going SP for someone with no medical issues.
I spent one afternoon flying one and was not very impressed. It seemed so flimsy, cheap and plastic that i lost interest. When i discovered the stoke/yoke/stick whatever, I gave up thinking of it as something that would compete for long. Cessna took a pile of bad advice and built it into a over priced, over weight, under performing pig, imo.