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I bought a grumman before I finished training. I am very pleased with how
it worked out and would do it again. Make sure you have the money for it and have a fairly good idea what sort of flying (how much load, how far) you will be doing. It is going to be expensive. Good luck and go ahead with it if you want. Just do your research first. Bottom line is you can never justify (finance-wise) having your own plane - but the less quantifiable things like always flying the same plane, having a reliable plane, etc are very nice if you can get away with owning. "C Kingsbury" wrote in message link.net... "New Pilot" wrote in message . .. Hello all, Wanted to hear your advice about buying a brand-new plane even before getting the PPL ticket. Here is my situation: I am a businessman sitting on quite a bit of cash being generated by my business, and I am also a student pilot, will probably get my ticket by the next Summer. I am thinking about buying one of them Cirri SR22. You've probably heard the saying that "A fool and his money will soon have more airplane than either can handle." You're probably not a fool but it's a wise statement to heed nonetheless. Does this make sense economically, or am I totally crazy? In general, how good an investment are those brand-new airplanes, provided one can afford to pay cash for them? There's only one kind of new asset that stands a good chance of appreciating over time: a house. And that works only because they ain't makin' any more land. If you want to preserve your equity buy a low-time plane that's 10-20 years old in good shape. If you do buy a new plane with the intent to do a leaseback you want to buy a common plane that everyone knows how to fly already. A new 172SP or 182 with the G1000 would be the queen of any rental fleet and would probably get plenty of usage. Since it's under warranty you won't have to sweat maintenance costs. Oh, and either of these would be very realistic planes to learn to fly in and not get murdered on insurance. I'm usually very bearish on leasebacks but this one could work. -cwk. |
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