Coolidge
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2019
- Messages
- 10
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Coolidge
Hello folks,
After years of dreaming, I finally find myself in a position where aircraft ownership and being able to fly around 100 hours a year is possible. I'm seeking a little education here before I make any costly or unnecessary mistakes.
I am finishing up my Sport Pilots License and would like to purchase an airplane between now and next summer. I'm prepared to make the purchase if the right one comes along, but I don't want to rush into it and do something I'll regret later.
As an aside, I understand most people see very little benefit in getting a Sport Pilots License over a Private Pilots License. For the sake of this thread, let's assume that there are no alternatives for me other than aircraft that fit into the Light Sport category so we can avoid that debate, if you please.
I have been looking at Champs, Chiefs, Cubs, & PA-11/15/17's for a long time now and have pretty much decided that one of these old rag wing taildraggers would be an ideal first airplane for me to own. I have hangar space lined up, an old A&P/IA with extensive maintenance experience & A.D. familiarity on all of the above that is willing to travel to do a pre-buy, and a ferry pilot that will bring it back from anywhere in the U.S. One of the added benefits of one of these models is that I'll be able to pay cash. I've thoroughly enjoyed the time I've spent in these in the past and 99.9% of my flying will be purely for recreation over very rural areas. It would be a perfect fit.
So, we'll call option 1 buying an old taildragger.
However, lately I've been finding myself considering the merits of buying a newer, more modern aircraft, specifically an RV-12 S-LSA. I know that if I went that route, I'd be getting a new, nicer, more capable airplane with a higher useful load but they're also considerably more expensive. This means I would likely end up financing about half of the purchase price, which I'm not too excited about. I still have the hangar space worked out, and I've spoken to Vic @ Base Leg Aviation who specializes in RV pre-buys, so I'm comfortable with the logistics of it, I'm just torn.
Looks like we'll call option 2 buying an RV-12.
First question; which option makes more sense to you? Pay cash for an old taildragger that will fill my current mission requirements perfectly, or spend a lot more money (half of it borrowed) on a newer, all metal modern aircraft with fancy avionics and an autopilot?
Second question; is there any way to figure out how quickly a newer airplane will lose value? I know it isn't an exact science, but how on earth could I figure out how much I'd lose on an RV-12? I figure on an old taildragger you'd come out alright, but I don't know how to figure out where a 10 year old airplane is on it's value curve.
Thanks in advance! Looking forward to hearing different perspectives.
Coolidge
After years of dreaming, I finally find myself in a position where aircraft ownership and being able to fly around 100 hours a year is possible. I'm seeking a little education here before I make any costly or unnecessary mistakes.
I am finishing up my Sport Pilots License and would like to purchase an airplane between now and next summer. I'm prepared to make the purchase if the right one comes along, but I don't want to rush into it and do something I'll regret later.
As an aside, I understand most people see very little benefit in getting a Sport Pilots License over a Private Pilots License. For the sake of this thread, let's assume that there are no alternatives for me other than aircraft that fit into the Light Sport category so we can avoid that debate, if you please.
I have been looking at Champs, Chiefs, Cubs, & PA-11/15/17's for a long time now and have pretty much decided that one of these old rag wing taildraggers would be an ideal first airplane for me to own. I have hangar space lined up, an old A&P/IA with extensive maintenance experience & A.D. familiarity on all of the above that is willing to travel to do a pre-buy, and a ferry pilot that will bring it back from anywhere in the U.S. One of the added benefits of one of these models is that I'll be able to pay cash. I've thoroughly enjoyed the time I've spent in these in the past and 99.9% of my flying will be purely for recreation over very rural areas. It would be a perfect fit.
So, we'll call option 1 buying an old taildragger.
However, lately I've been finding myself considering the merits of buying a newer, more modern aircraft, specifically an RV-12 S-LSA. I know that if I went that route, I'd be getting a new, nicer, more capable airplane with a higher useful load but they're also considerably more expensive. This means I would likely end up financing about half of the purchase price, which I'm not too excited about. I still have the hangar space worked out, and I've spoken to Vic @ Base Leg Aviation who specializes in RV pre-buys, so I'm comfortable with the logistics of it, I'm just torn.
Looks like we'll call option 2 buying an RV-12.
First question; which option makes more sense to you? Pay cash for an old taildragger that will fill my current mission requirements perfectly, or spend a lot more money (half of it borrowed) on a newer, all metal modern aircraft with fancy avionics and an autopilot?
Second question; is there any way to figure out how quickly a newer airplane will lose value? I know it isn't an exact science, but how on earth could I figure out how much I'd lose on an RV-12? I figure on an old taildragger you'd come out alright, but I don't know how to figure out where a 10 year old airplane is on it's value curve.
Thanks in advance! Looking forward to hearing different perspectives.
Coolidge