I'll have to ask around at the local flightschools who have tailwheels and see what their experience has been.
Can you expand a little bit about flying well. How would I be able to tell if I'm flying well? Would it show itself in my crosswind landings?
I've been talking to different flight schools and the original list was a subset of the aircraft they have available. I don't know how to choose a flight instructor and several schools I spoke to will just assign their least busy (maybe newest?) CFI to you. Many years ago I squandered time/money by not managing my training and having a CFI who told me I fly well and just kept encouraging me to fly. Burned through my money without soloing, but I did get xc, nav and night training. When I look through any modern syllabus, I realize some of the ways it could have been better.
I would consider buying a plane, I just don't have any experience in what that would entail.
I purchased my training airplane nearly 20 years ago. Renting makes the school money and your rental also goes to pay fir a higher rate of insurance.
As an example, there’s a Cherokee 140 that is either for sale or is about to be on the classifieds here. The sale price is 23500; Imagine buying that airplane for 20-24k for the sake of argument. It has 1500 hours or so on the engine, and a mechanic confirming the engine in good condition would give you plenty of time left for your private and instrument rides if not commercial.
If I recall correctly, assuming you’re dirt poor with good credit, time value of money and all, I recall 25k aircraft financing for 20 years running around $250 a month. There are a few firms that specialize in aircraft financing. Many buy cash, some take a home equity loan and others use their financial aid awards. Ymmv.
Depending on your location, a tiedown could be less than 20 a month to a little over a hundred a month in price gouging Southern California.
My ia charges two dollars per horsepower fir the annual. A shop would charge more. My 172 has 160hp. Insurance time me a little over $500 a year.
Will you pay more as a student or New pilot? You bet. Will you need money for squawks? Undoubtedly.
At close to $200 an hour for most school rentals, at 50 hours for a ppl you’re already 10k in. Add instrument and that more than doubles.
With my example you can sell your run out Cherokee/172 for not much less than you bought it for, learn a ton while owning, and be way ahead from renting. Split the costs with a partner? Even more so.
Deviate by talking about taileraggers, TAAs with fancy glass, RVs with a completely different acquisition cost and resale market and the equation blows up.
Cessna. Piper. Resell when done, then decide what you really want in an airplane.
I kept my 172, bought a turbo mooney, have a Lancair, and I’m consolidating planes as my mission and finances change.
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