How far to drive to buy?
On Feb 12, 8:00*pm, John wrote:
On Feb 6, 7:31*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Adam wrote:
The key is to leave yourself some extra time soyoudon't have to feel
rushed and it will be a fun trip.
Think of it as a long distance glider retreive. It will giveyoua
valuable retreive crew perspective on road trips.
Ray
I live in MN.
I looked at a sailplane one Christmas (from the in-laws in Mi I drove
to N. Ohio). I passed on that one. Next I flew to see one in S.C. It
wasfarbetter but I passed on that one too.
Then I flew to CA - this one I did purchase. Frank W was headed out to
CA and drove it back to CO and later kindly met me half-way in
Nebraska. In all I drove one full day and paid Frank a ratefartoo
low compare to U-ship. He did a pro job of course!
In all it was fun looking about but not something I'd want to do more
than once every 5 years. *IMHO itwouldbe nuts to buy one without
looking it over in person and doing your homework first.
Ifyoudon't look at it beforeyoubuy, having the sellerdrivehalf way
to meetyouprobably encourages "full disclosure", because he will have
as much invested asyoudo. Ifyoudrivethousands to where he lives,
and he doesn't have todriveat all, he might count onyouaccepting
less thanyouthoughtyouwere.
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA
* Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly
* "Transponders in Sailplanes"http://tinyurl.com/y739x4
* ** Sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more
* "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" atwww.motorglider.org
I took the risk and drove a round-trip of 6420 miles (Oregon to
Sarasota, Florida) for a glider -and darn glad I did! *I just got back
from a 6.5 day trip!
was it an LS-3?
Brad
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