Fencer
Experimentalist
Follow up question would be...
Is it worth it??
No. You will go bankrupt on gas alone. I flew 425 hours in the last 10 months and boy it hurts on average paycheck.
Follow up question would be...
Is it worth it??
Follow up question would be...
Is it worth it??
Like all tough questions in aviation, "It depends."
For me, yes. I love the freedom of being able to do whatever I want with my plane, whenever I want. There is no FBO or club telling me the plane isn't available when I want it. I can (and have) taken it around the pattern at midnight just to relax and clear my mind. Nobody will ever tell me I can't land it on grass or on a private strip or in winds that are stronger than x knots. I love the peace of mind in knowing the plane has been maintained and flown exactly the way I want it to, because nobody else has a stake in it other than me. I can leave my headset in the plane and the seat is always adjusted just the way I like it.
I love taking friends up for rides. I love going to pancake breakfasts on Saturday mornings and being able to say, "Yeah, that's my 140 over there." Because seriously...if you show up at a pancake breakfast with a rental 172, you're not as cool as me. I mean...you're cool. But not as cool as me.
I have made many, many amazing memories. I've flown it coast to coast on more than one occasion. I've taken it on several camping trips, including a few trips to the Oshkosh air show. I've seen and done things that most non-airplane owner pilots only dream about.
Flying my plane, since it's from 1946, is like experiencing a part of history (although some may argue the same can be said for flying at my current airline!). It brings me back to the simple fact, I straight up LOVE flying, like in the same way I loved it as a 50 hour private pilot. It's simple and pure. It's the kind of flying that reminds me why I wanted to be a pilot when I was a kid.
Now, here's the kicker I try not to think about: I have no idea how much money I've dropped in to my plane over the years. Between the initial purchase, maintenance, gas, insurance, etc. I wouldn't be surprised if it were $40,000 or $50,000 I've spent.
I'm a young guy. I bought the plane when I was 23. If I'd taken the money I've spent on flying and put it into conservative investments, I could have turned it into $1,000,000 by the time I retire. Literally.
But then I ask myself, how has owning this plane shaped my life? Would I trade those experiences and memories for $1 million as an old man?
I don't think I would.
YMMV.
Cherokee 180 - Definitely not a hangar queen (200hrs/yr)Just taking a quick survey to see what people are paying for things MX, Hangar/TieDown, Insruance etc. All your cost that arent with the engine turning. please list type too! Thanks
Does making your plane available for rental (for training),I failed to mention in mine that I have it insured for instruction and rental, which adds about $2,000 to my annual insurance bill.
Does making your plane available for rental (for training),
make it a tax deduction?
Baron B55, $400 / mo hangar == $4800 /yr + $4000 for 1M smooth insurance + $1200 ca taxes so that's 10k a year before it moves..
THanks for the info guys...I did some math and it looks like the break even point from renting/owning is about 5 hours of flying. (Not considering the actual purchase) Sound about right??
What taxes are those exactly?
keep this in mind when deciding what plane you want and what you want in it. The more bells and whistles the more mx it will probably need over time. If you just want something to get in the air you can't go wrong with something like a colt or tripacer5 hours per month? Yes for a light single that'd be about right. But remember, it's very easy to have $2,000-5,000 of unexpected maintenance pop up, especially in the first couple years of owning. Crack a cylinder or muffler, loose a gyro, vacuum pumps are only good for about 500 hours, mags will probably get overhauled at 500, radio starts acting weird and needs some bench work, various AD's on different airframes, etc etc... you really need to budget for the unexpected, its going to happen.
THanks for the info guys...I did some math and it looks like the break even point from renting/owning is about 5 hours of flying. (Not considering the actual purchase) Sound about right??