ShortField
No one of consequence
No shovels. Get a blower.
ShortField said:No shovels. Get a blower.
I have found blowers and stairs don't get along well.![]()
ShortField said:Oh man, no stairs. That just reaks of effort.
Well I'm glad to know that it's feasable. Does anyone have any advise for starting a small chater company and flying for yourself? I realize there are many pros and cons as well as financial burdons, but is that realistic or once I'm done with my flight training and college try to fly for the airlines or 135 and just have a side business in another field?
Thanks for the comments! Please keep them coming
Well realistically yes. Although I have some business experience already and will be spending a few more years doing some R&D.
What kind of jobs do they have? Any professional practices (doctor, dentist, lawyer)? Can this be done at regional level?There are quite a few pilots I know of that do close to the company minimum of flying hours and strictly run their businesses during the week.
I'm pretty business savvy and I would LOVE to have a small business in aviation one day, but if after further research turns out to be totally unfeasable, I would like to have a plan B and C...
Which leads me to me questios: Could I buy an airplane (Like a Citation II or even a 421) and have it added to a charter compainies OPSpecs and fly that aircraft as a charter pilot with that company? I realize that it's necessarily cost effective, but I am curious
I'm also curious if it's realistic to fly full time for any air carrier (91, 121, 135) and operate a business full time as well to supplement income? Does anyone on here do that now?
What kind of jobs do they have? Any professional practices (doctor, dentist, lawyer)? Can this be done at regional level?
What kind of jobs do they have? Any professional practices (doctor, dentist, lawyer)? Can this be done at regional level?
My advice is that you will need a helluva lot of money and time to start a charter op. By the time you navigate the hell of the FAA regulatory paperwork, insurance, the mounds of paperwork, to get a 135 cert, you will wonder what you are getting yourself into. The basic and cheapest (but still expensive) and easiest op would be single pilot/owner operator one plane. Just some quickie basiscs......you obviously need a plane. A decent plane that someone would pay money to you for you to charter them in. I can't see anything less than a six seater twin myself. You need a letter of intent with your ducks in a row to whatever FBO you would want to use and you will work with an FSDO also. Make the FSDO your best friend. They will be a great help to you. You will get a POI and to use to create your Ops Specs which will fit your operation. But it took me months after I submitted my PASI (pre ap statement of intent) to even get that far. You will need to consider the drug testing, AAIP, MELS, insurance requirements, RNAV procedures, hazmat, maintenance and much more. At least with single pilot ops I don't believe you will need training requirements and programs, or a general ops manual. You may want to seek out an aviation attorney or a company which specializes in setting all of this crap up, but also be prepared to do a lot of the research and paperwork yourself. You will save some money and learn quite a bit in the process and believe me, it is a process. It is not quick. You need to determine the costs of operating your plane and business as well. Then you get into advertising, what kind of charters you intend to do and how to get clients and keep them. You will need some sort of office and some basic office equipment. You need a good accountant. Now, a good offset would be a plane that you can teach in and charter with. That will help offset some of your costs especially when charters are slow and you will still be building hours. I am not sure in the beginning how you could manage all this start up process part time, however and think $$$$$. Lots of $$$$$. You could do scenic tours (I don't know where you live or if that if feasible) and you can fly pax within 25 miles of your departure airport (that is your FBO- not any airport) and I believe you can do that under 91 which would be easier. You could look into freight ops instead of pax ops. Any time you haul people around it's going to cost you much more for insurance than instruction insurance or freight.Well I'm glad to know that it's feasable. Does anyone have any advise for starting a small chater company and flying for yourself? I realize there are many pros and cons as well as financial burdons, but is that realistic or once I'm done with my flight training and college try to fly for the airlines or 135 and just have a side business in another field?
Thanks for the comments! Please keep them coming
There is a spirit captain who owns the local A&P shop. He started it as a side business but it grew to the point now he just manages everything and has other A&P's do the work and he just signs off on it. Being a IA would be a must though to make something like that work.Great Thread. I was wondering if you could work part time as a A&P mechanic, doing 100 hours and pre buy inspections on your off days. It's really something I'm always thinking about.