And I'm not going to deny that if we are going to continue to attract young people to aviation we need have airplanes that are attractive, affordable, fun to fly, and have a connection to our technology driven world.
The Tecnam P2010 is a great looking airplane (for a high wing
). But I really wish it had a cantilever wing.
Honestly I’ll disagree here. I don’t think the kids give a rats behind about the airplane’s attractiveness or whatever. They don’t want it dirty but think back to when you were that age. Anyone who could even own an airplane was a giant to you.
When I was learning to fly at 19 all I cared about was the rental price. I learned over the years to rent from places that were a little above the bottom dollar because the garbage at the cheap place was always broken. But I still was amazed anybody could afford to own any of those things.
Style and affordability and all that really only factors into the buyers of the airplanes, and that’s middle aged pilots and older. Kids aren’t buying them. Hell, everything in the panel of that clapped out 150 I soloed in was magical to me. I didn’t know **** about aviation. I trusted a CFI I had met to not let me rent or fly anything dangerous, but other than that, if I could save up the money from my three jobs to go flying with him, I went. I was VERY practical back then. Not because I didn’t like those shiny airplanes across the ramp or ogle them regularly, but because that was light years away from my 20-something budget.
Now if you say these things need to be reasonably stylish for the soccer mom or dad to buy one or God forbid, lease it back to a club so kids can fly it as a rental... yeah. That makes a little sense. Of course if they’ve been flying a while they’ll understand (and the kids sure as hell won’t) that a freaking GPS costs over $10,000 in airplanes.
That’s one problem with the “connected world” desire if people are addicted to tech. Enormous price gouging due to a boutique marketplace and FAA certification of what’s a bog standard COTS GPS chipset these days.
But even at that, most middle aged owners would happily let youngsters beat uo their pride and joy if they could make something doing it. The ROI on airplanes is God-awful.
Back when I was learning to fly, people were still taking advantage of the taxation benefits of capital spending that were available back then. Want a middle aged person to spend stupid amounts of money? Give them a tax break. They’re in their prime earnings years. They get a tax break they’ll think the airplane on leaseback is a good investment. It’s not. But it’ll feel better than the usual bending over without lube by IRS.
Tecnam, Sport Cruiser/Piper Sport, Skycatcher... this “appeal to the youngsters” thing has already been tried and failed. Because young people don’t buy airplanes.
Build something rugged that an owner knows is built stout enough to survive a leaseback and still be flyable when their time to fly it comes around on the schedule and figure out a way for them to make money on it, even if it’s not much or break-even, and you’ll have an entire new fleet of them plying the skies with all sorts of wide eyed youngsters renting them for whatever the rental rates are.
Telling a youngster that their dream JUST to get to the Private rating will run them $10,000 is like telling a homeless person that the tract houses up the road are only $300,000. So far out of their league it doesn’t even register.
Tell them it rents for less than $100/hr? They’re going to show up in droves.
Airplanes have never been “affordable”. But if you want the fleet refreshed you have to get guys like me buying something other than a 40 year old 182 and that new thing has to perform as well.
I don’t see the young people who want to fly caring much about affordability, it’s already 20 years too soon in their earning power to buy airplanes. They like flashy glass ships, but if the rental sheet says the glass ship is $300/hr, and the venerable old but well maintained Skyhawk is $150, we already know which they’ll be renting.
And frankly, at the Private pilot level, their iPad will provide all the techno gadgetry they long for, even in a steam gauge airplane. Instrument they’ll want an IFR GPS and will be amazed anybody spends $20,000 retrofitting a panel for IFR GPS and ADS-B... they live in a world where that has always been available for free on their cell phone.
What the future training market needs is something as tough as a Skyhawk or PA28 for far less than half a million bucks and some sort of business incentive to own stuff like that and share it with others via rentals. Preferably tax breaks. Big ones.
So the really hard up kids, what do they do? If they want to fly and don’t think they’ll survive or find three jobs like I did... they’re going to take the “easy” path and take out a student loan for $150,000 and hand it to UND or ER or one of those shops. Way easier lifestyle than spending $25K they had to earn via jobs in their 20s of disposable income.
Of course the entrepreneur types will figure out how to buy a beater 150/152 and go fly the holy hell out of it until they’re ready for their twin ride, sell it, and buy a mid or high time Twinkie and fly the hell out of that, sell it and grab a pipeline or aerial mapping job, all completely broke and happy to be flying, until they hit 1200-1500 hours and then finally apply for a job flying on someone else’s dime. You couldn’t tempt that pilot with even the best made new trainer. They want hours and they want them yesterday.
What you can tempt young pilots with is really good instruction in non-constantly-broken airplanes prior to their time building phase.
Mommie and Daddie want the Lexus and the Cirrus Pilot Center “experience”. Kids just want to fly.
By the way, the best aircraft that meet your affordable, has some tech, and looks great missions are the modern glider fleet. Europe exports some beautiful aircraft to us that meet those “requirements”. And soaring is a very inexpensive way to build solid stick and rudder skills for young folks.
The problem is keeping the beefy towplanes maintained and flying and not wrecking them. The busy local glider club has totaled two Pawnees and the commercial club lost one to the midair with the Cirrus. (Ironically for this post...) You gotta have a beefy towplane to play glider up here at our altitudes. Some gliders can do okay behind a 182 in the right conditions... but bigger heavier ships are going to need a bigger workhorse up front.
Again the youngster isn’t going to care what’s towing them. They’re going to ask how much $ per 1000’ of tow.