Cheapest airworthy airplane is generally the best choice.
Maybe so. Unfortunately, until a person has a few hundred hours, they really don't know what's airworthy and what's not. A brand new person has to rely 100% on the word of their instructor for if a plane is airworthy.
And I don't trust most people in charge of the "cheap" places to give an accurate indication of if something is airworthy. They're too interested in keeping their planes in the air.
A classic example from a few days ago: My friend rented a Cessna 150 from the local cheap, no-frills operator. The shimmy dampener was completely shot...he said it felt like the plane was going to rattle itself to pieces during both takeoff and landing unless he held full aft elevator.
When he called the owner to report the problem, he was told, "Yeah, that plane's been like that for a long time. You just gotta pull back."
My friend didn't think it was too big of a deal because the owner said it wasn't.
I told my friend, do you think Cessna designed it to shimmy like that? No? That means it needs to be fixed then.
That's what drives me nuts, dealing with pilots who learn at the cheap places. Too often they have a really skewed view of what an "acceptable" problem is. One time I was giving a rental checkout to a customer who had learned at such a place. During the preflight, we found a big oil streak coming out from the cowling. Before I had a chance to say anything, he said, "Ehh, these planes, they get greasy just from sitting, you know?"
He was ready to hop in and fly. I said, "Well, our planes don't. I'm going to have a mechanic figure out what's going on before we fly." I can't remember the exact issue, but it was some sort of blown seal somewhere I believe. There was definitely a problem. The customer wasn't even going to squawk it, because that's how things were done at the cheap place.
Cheapest CFI is a bad idea.
Agreed.