This wasn’t what I was looking for, shopping for a new policy myself, but I got a chuckle out of this, so thought I would help
Ok…
If you are serious
Find a good FLOAT PLANE CFI, get on the seaplane pilots association and start searching schools and instructors and make calls
BUY THE PLANE YOU WANT AND DO ALL YOUR TRAINING IN IT
You will probably have self insure for all your solo ops where you don’t have a EXPERIENCED SEAPLANE instructor with you
I would imagine if you end up with a 100-200hrs in the make model you will be insurable, now it’s going to be over $10k a year, but if you’re talking about buying a DHC2/206 amphib and have lake house(s) I’m guessing that’s not too much money for you
Between the two planes, the DHC2 is going to take more abuse and be more forgiving to fly, but it’s a good 20-30kts slower, cost more to buy and for sure more to maintain, also fuel and oil burn will be higher and it won’t fit in most conventional single plane GA hangars
Buying a project, unless you have worked on planes before, in which case you wouldn’t ask any of this, this is not going to save you money, it will probably cost you more shy of finding some crazy “barn yard” time capsule type deal
So if you’re serious, get on seaplanes association, make some calls, find a “mentor pilot” I’d even maybe take him on as a contractor employee for a summer, buy the plane, and start eating that elephant
Personal I love float flying, I have friends who have 182s and Bos, frankly I don’t understand the appeal for the price with most SEL GA planes, floats are a different world, and amphibs bridge the gap of straight float limitations…albeit at a weight cost
No, many high time guys (me) sometimes self insure to save money, but to compare that to a fresh PPL, well it’s not a matter of saving money, it’s a matter of no one is going to write him
That’s news to me, for a new landing site sure lots of research, up to testing the depths and everything with a canoe, but for spots you know, I fire up and go, now if it’s windy or you had a large snow melt or dry spell or a wind storm that took tree limbs off a few days ago that obviously requires more time
MAYBE insurance speak that’s true, but most of the older amphibs have been on their back once
50k a year might be true for a 135 ship, also you’re nuts if you pay half a mil for most float 206s
500k maybe a newer one, but you don’t want a bloated plane for floats, most the 206s on floats are older U206s, ether IO520s or IO550 swaps, very spartan interior, no carpet, no padded side panels, no giant motorhome looking seats etc
Problem is if you do land wheels down on water you might not make it, depending on your belts, physical and mental condition and the water temp
If there are old people or kids in the back, god chance you just killed them
Compare to a Bo landing wheels up, everyone just climbs out most times and WALKS away
Case and point
One thing to add about seaplane flying
Lots of people make it out to be a easy weekend checkride, this is very disingenuous
Yes, seaplane ride factories like browns will get you your SES over a weekend and a day or so, however it’s more of a BFR and a checkride photo for your Facebook
Yes you learned a couple things, had fun, got some pictures and a t shirt, but turn around and ask to rent the plane and watch them laugh at you, and this business is fine 99% of the time
They know it’s mostly pilots who want to have some fun and get a BFR and do something different
They know they won’t rent you the plane after
They know of the very few places who rent seaplanes, they won’t just cut you loose when you show up at their door ether
Of the few who might want to buy a seaplane, these are not exactly often inexpensive planes, let alone where you keep it, lest we get into the major price jump of a amphib, we’ll the bank won’t give you the loan without insurance, and after leaving jack browns, or any of the other weekend ride places, a insurance company won’t touch you, thus no loan, thus you don’t get to rip off into the wild blue with your 3 kids wife and dog in a seaplane
So the only real risk with the seaplane ride companies are the higher net worth individuals who REALLY want a seaplane are willing to self insure, most high worth folks are scared of liability so they won’t roll the dice, forward to no wild blue with just you and the kiddies
So it’s high worth people willing to self insure, so out of all the seaplane rides that’s maybe 1% ?
But for anyone who thinks takes a weekend course and confuses what they experienced with being ready to actually PIC a seaplane, it is simply not the case
OPs best bet would be to hire a seaplane CFI with time in type on a monthly rate and do all his training with him, keep paying him, or just safety pilot with a insurable seaplane pilot who doesn’t mind babysitting and maybe taking control if needed, until he has 150hrs or so, at that point he will be just good enough to probably not kill himself and good enough for a insurance company to accept for $10k plus per year