Roger Roger said:
I'm having this mental image of hordes of 9 seaters filling the skies out of small towns...Piper firing up the Navajo line again...$60,000 jobs flying out and backs in a brand new Chieftain or Garavan....basically Alaska but without the VFR nonsense and the ridiculous cost of living.
z987k said:
Probably a month or so. Cape air seemed roll out those Montana routes without much problem.... at like 2x the bid that Silver was flying them for....Only problem is a lot of the EAS routes take you well above 10k. PC-12 anyone?
The fastest take-over I can think of was about 5 months from approval, and that with an existing going airline. Start-up companies take years for FAA approvals. Negotiations, leases, proving flights, updates to company manuals, EAS approvals, and probably more. GLA currently flies to 22 EAS cities out of hubs in DEN, LAX, PHX and (barely) MSP, plus 8 non-EAS cities. No one has that much spare metal sitting around, even on rotting tires. Then the new guys have to hire & train more pilots and maintenance, stock spare parts, etc, and THAT isn't a flight in the park right now.
Absent the single-engine issue with PAX (the EAS issues would probably expedite under duress), Pilatus would seem to be the answer. Pressurized, service ceiling 30,000 feet, take-off runway about 1,500 ft, landing less, reliable PT-6 power. Costs about what a B-1900 did when new back then! SeaPort has been running one or more around Kansas-Missouri (at least until they did an all-gear-up landing at SAL last month. Even GLA never did that - only partial gear-ups when less than 3 greens).
Lots of capital to start-up.