2 1/2 to 3 good years of flying a beat up rental, when you can get a chance to reserve it... and after three years you have nothing left but logbook entries and memories. That’s cool.
Buy something affordable, fly the paint off it for 2 1/2 to 3 years, putting a little more money into it at annual, plus cheap insurance, and gas, and still have an airplane left over at the end of those three years to keep on flying for 10, 15, 30 more. That’s cooler.
Oh I agree, I’m just sayin’, one has to weigh the options against the easiest way, which is renting.
I don’t rent, and love being an owner, but it’s damn spendy.
And there’s a secret to renting... rent the high(er) performance stuff that isn’t being used for Commerical training, and it’s nearly almost always available.
Various nice Pipers and Cessnas have come and gone from the local clubs over the years... owners lease them back, and then they don’t fly.
Anything like a Turbo 182 doesn’t get rented for training much, when there’s ten 172s on the flight line. But there’s always one or two airplanes like that in bigger rental fleets. They’re almost always not booked.
At smaller training only places that have few aircraft, yeah... all of them are flying.
I hate to say it but the airplanes that really sit and go nowhere are the older Cirri at the club that specializes in those. The prices aren’t truly all that awful for them either, but once you get above $200/hr, people want the fancy new glass paneled ones. The steam gauge birds don’t fly nearly as much.
I’ve talked to a number of owners (three now) who fell for the hype that leasing them back to the Cirrus specialty place would make them “affordable”. Then Cirrus moved on into newer panels and onboard toys and they’re disgruntled owners who want their airplanes to fly more.
Two of them still have a lot of years of airplane payments to go on them. I don’t know about the third.
Sounded good in the marketing material back in the early 2000s...