I am a fairly new pilot. I've earned my PPL a few months ago. Since then I've taken on some passengers; my dad, my girlfriend and her (adult) kids, and a few co-workers.
I'm not a wealthy person by any stretch so I doubt I'll be purchasing my own plane any time soon (if ever) so for the moment I'm confined to renting. Renting is pretty expensive (around $120/hr) so to make it affordable I'm always looking to bring some willing passengers along with me to help share the expenses.
The problem is that the rentals that are available to me are also used (in-fact primarily used) for flight training. They are mechanically sound and airworthy but they aren't pretty: Cracked plastic on the interior, cracks in plastic coverings on some of the superficial exterior (such as the base of the tail), a baggage door that tends to fly open on landing even if locked, inoperative backup attitude indicator, etc...
When people rent cars they expect that, along with being reliable and sound that it should have very few dents and scratches and that the interior is clean and free of damage. So when I bring passengers I can feel their hesitation and I kind of have to go through a routine of explaining the airworthiness of the aircraft and that the damage they see are akin to a missing or broken hubcap, ugly but not dangerous.
I'm wondering if this experience is par for the course for rental aircraft? Thoughts? Opinions?
I'm not a wealthy person by any stretch so I doubt I'll be purchasing my own plane any time soon (if ever) so for the moment I'm confined to renting. Renting is pretty expensive (around $120/hr) so to make it affordable I'm always looking to bring some willing passengers along with me to help share the expenses.
The problem is that the rentals that are available to me are also used (in-fact primarily used) for flight training. They are mechanically sound and airworthy but they aren't pretty: Cracked plastic on the interior, cracks in plastic coverings on some of the superficial exterior (such as the base of the tail), a baggage door that tends to fly open on landing even if locked, inoperative backup attitude indicator, etc...
When people rent cars they expect that, along with being reliable and sound that it should have very few dents and scratches and that the interior is clean and free of damage. So when I bring passengers I can feel their hesitation and I kind of have to go through a routine of explaining the airworthiness of the aircraft and that the damage they see are akin to a missing or broken hubcap, ugly but not dangerous.
I'm wondering if this experience is par for the course for rental aircraft? Thoughts? Opinions?