Ted
The pilot formerly known as Twin Engine Ted
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2007
- Messages
- 30,006
- Display Name
Display name:
iFlyNothing
What does it have in the panel? There is a point in the pricing where it is more cost effective to part the plane out and remove it from the fly able market. Eventually the lowball mindset will have cut its own throat and all that will be on the market is newer planes at several hundred thousand dollars, or rags that people are willing to take bottom dollar for. Luckily there will be a sufficient supply of good parts from good planes so people can spend twice as much putting the rags back together for than they could have bought the good plane for to begin with. The lack of critical thinking ability does not just show itself in the political arena.
Not really a lack of critical thinking, more that it's markets at work. This applies to all sorts of things - planes, cars, houses. In few cases can you put improvements in and get all of your maintenance cost out of it. If you do all your own work and pick properly, you can. Most people don't, and assume that end value = start value + maintenance + improvements. That is simply not true.
In the big Twin Cessna world (340s, 414s, and 421s) you do see a vast difference in cost between low end and high end, and that has all to do with the important things - avionics, P&I, engines, other work, etc. However, it's still not a 100% return on investment, and it only works because the planes are worth enough to start. Your 310 (or even the one I fly) are old and worthless enough that improvements will never pay for themselves. You only do it because you want to get the enjoyment out of them.
Few people truly understand how these markets work, especially the owner pilot who views his or her plane as a prized possession with sentimental value rather than an asset.