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#1
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![]() On the whole, I've gone to the airport and found that the airplane was canceled more often than I have canceled the airplane. Earlier on, my instructor said to me: If you learn nothing else from this process, you will learn patience. The planes are old. I am old. Naturally we have our down days. Yesterday I went to the airport and found that Four One Victor idled at 1000 rpm. I figured that was a complication I didn't need after a three-month layoff, so I elected not to fly. I reckon that was the plane's doing, not mine. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#2
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"Peter Duniho" wrote in message ...
IMHO, it's more important to not alienate those who cancel for a good reason than it is to worry too much about those who cancel just because they had reserved on a whim and then decided not to fly. There can't be that many of the latter, but there are plenty of the former. In addition, those who "reserve on a whim" won't take long to identify. If they are truly a problem, even a half dozen foundless cancellations in a month wouldn't break the bank at the FBO, but would certainly be enough to drop the guy as a customer. In many cases, it's not the FBO that owns the aircraft... I had made the mistake of putting my aircraft on leaseback after I purchased it... It got to the point where if I wanted to be able to take my own plane out for a weekend trip, I had to reserve a month in advance (i.e. past where the written log was allowing others to reserve)... Many times I would find someone who had reserved for a couple of hours on the weekend having cancelled and if it hadn't been for him, I would have been able to take it out that weekend... Of course there was also the issue of students (and instructors) damaging the plastics on the interior, stripping the gears on the radios by turning them past their stops, and various other things, so I took it off leaseback about 5 years ago and have been VERY happy with knowing that the plane is always available... |
#3
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The club I belong to (Edmonton Flying Club) has an automated reservation
system. You can cancel an aircraft booking up to 24 hours before the rental, no questions asked. After that period, you get charged for 1 hour if you don't show up or call in to cancel with the dispatcher. They do not question judgements based on weather or illness. You are, after all, the PIC. In fact, the last time I was going to go flying I got to the club and then decided not to go up, because I had a nervous passenger, and it was a gusty day with constant light to moderate turbulence reported (strong upper winds, too). They accepted my decision with no problem, and even helped me out by soliciting pireps from others who were aloft. "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... "Greg Esres" wrote in message ... [...] My thought is that an airplane is a resource to the FBO, and they should try to achieve the highest utilization that they can. Renters who reserve but don't use the aircraft are using the resource without paying for it, which produces higher costs for everyone else. This is related to the "what happens when the plane breaks down" thread. You might want to revisit that to see the varying opinions. My opinion, of course (that is, if you read the other thread), is that the whole point for renting is so that you don't have to deal with those issues. That includes weather issues. There is some risk involved in owning an airplane, with respect to maintenance, and with respect to not being able to fly because of weather. One rents so as to not have to take those risks. Someone else does, and spreads the cost of that risk across all of their clients, in the form of an hourly rate for the airplane. However, the FBO shouldn't have to tolerate people cancelling for no good reason. A "one free" policy such as CJ describes would be more appropriate for those situations. I just think the FBO or club needs to be careful to only apply that sort of policy to situations that are clearly due only to the pilot flaking out. [...] Some people cancel only when there's good reason to do so, but others reserve on a whim just in case they might want to fly. IMHO, it's more important to not alienate those who cancel for a good reason than it is to worry too much about those who cancel just because they had reserved on a whim and then decided not to fly. There can't be that many of the latter, but there are plenty of the former. In addition, those who "reserve on a whim" won't take long to identify. If they are truly a problem, even a half dozen foundless cancellations in a month wouldn't break the bank at the FBO, but would certainly be enough to drop the guy as a customer. Pete |
#4
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On Sat, 09 Apr 2005 18:27:31 GMT, Greg Esres
wrote: Our school doesn't charge people for not showing up, much less for cancelling very close to the proposed flight time. You can even schedule a plane for a week, then cancel at the last minute. Or you can schedule a 5 hour block and only use 1 hour of it. That's true where I rent as well. I don't know about the 5-hour block, however, and you certainly can't rent a plane for several days, unless possibly in the fall or spring. But there are no penalties for mucking about with the typical one, two, or three hour rentals. I generally have a pretty good excuse, however, or else I am full of apologies. -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net In Search of Lost Time: www.readingproust.com |
#5
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How does your FBO handle pilots who booked a plane a week earlier, show
up to the airport with passengers to find a squawk listed 2 weeks earlier makes the plane unairworthy for your mission. I'm referring to out of date GPS databases, no panel lighting for night flights, etc. Can the pilot charge the owner/FBO for their time? Sure we can boycott their plane but I just wasted about 3 hours of my time scheduling the plane, checking weather, doing the flight plan, filing flight plan, driving to the airport, walking out to the plane, taking the cover off, doing part of the preflight just to put the cover back on and drive home with disappointed passengers. Just happened and I ****ed away my Saturday on a very nice day. will I get anything for it? No. But I'll sure spread the word around the club. Gerald Sylvester Greg Esres wrote: I'm curious to know what sort of cancellation policies that flight schools and rental outfits have in place to make it highly probably that those who schedule airplanes will actually fly them. Our school doesn't charge people for not showing up, much less for cancelling very close to the proposed flight time. You can even schedule a plane for a week, then cancel at the last minute. Or you can schedule a 5 hour block and only use 1 hour of it. Can you institute policies that you must use some percentage of your scheduled time or face some charge for unused time? Does a non-refundable deposit make sense for extended schedule blocks? Can you really charge some fee to those who don't show up or cancel too late without alienating your customers? Appreciate any thoughts on what works and seems fair to all concerned. |
#6
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G. Sylvester wrote:
How does your FBO handle pilots who booked a plane a week earlier, show up to the airport with passengers to find a squawk listed 2 weeks earlier makes the plane unairworthy for your mission. I'm referring to out of date GPS databases, no panel lighting for night flights, etc. Can the pilot charge the owner/FBO for their time? Sure we can boycott their plane but I just wasted about 3 hours of my time scheduling the plane, checking weather, doing the flight plan, filing flight plan, driving to the airport, walking out to the plane, taking the cover off, doing part of the preflight just to put the cover back on and drive home with disappointed passengers. Just happened and I ****ed away my Saturday on a very nice day. will I get anything for it? No. But I'll sure spread the word around the club. What was the squawk this time? |
#7
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At my local club there is no charge for not showing up, unless you do it
repeatedly and **** off the owner of the airport. We have 20 150/152's and when the weather is flyable most of them are always gone. If you don't show up, your plane will most likely be flying within 15 minutes of your appointment. It's such a friendly place here, there's always a few people in the lobby just talking and a constant exchange of pilots checking in and out. Thanks to online scheduling everything is a cinch. "Greg Esres" wrote in message ... I'm curious to know what sort of cancellation policies that flight schools and rental outfits have in place to make it highly probably that those who schedule airplanes will actually fly them. Our school doesn't charge people for not showing up, much less for cancelling very close to the proposed flight time. You can even schedule a plane for a week, then cancel at the last minute. Or you can schedule a 5 hour block and only use 1 hour of it. Can you institute policies that you must use some percentage of your scheduled time or face some charge for unused time? Does a non-refundable deposit make sense for extended schedule blocks? Can you really charge some fee to those who don't show up or cancel too late without alienating your customers? Appreciate any thoughts on what works and seems fair to all concerned. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#8
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I think there is no way to institute a policy at all. It will either
be so toothless as to make it trivial for an abuser to circumvent, or it will inevitably catch people cancelling for legitimate reasons. Here are a few: Crosswinds too much for the individual (I actually flew with a private pilot who had NEVER experienced more than 5 kts of crosswind component) and, in the general case, weather that is too much for that individual pilot but would be no big deal for a more capable pilot. Weather crappy at destination. Many people rent airplanes to go places. It might be just fine where you are, but 200 miles away where the renter is going the weather is (or is forecast to be) beyond his capabilities. Personal illness, lack of sleep, etc. Impossible to disprove. Then you have another problem. If you have policies that charge the pilot for a cancellation, there will be an expectation of compensation if the airplane is not ready and airworthy. In general, unless you are prepared to pay cancellation fees if the plane isn't ready, don't expect to collect any if the pilot isn't ready. The real solution is that when you identify someone who abuses the system, don't rent to him anymore. It's really that simple. Michael |
#9
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Greg wrote:
I'm curious to know what sort of cancellation policies that flight schools and rental outfits have in place to make it highly probably that those who schedule airplanes will actually fly them. The school where I trained doesn't do anything, most likely for all the good reasons mentioned in this thread. What I suggested to them was to have their web-based scheduling system, which was written by a student of theirs, include a feature that allows a "backup" renter to schedule an aircraft and then emails this person if the first renter cancels. Seems easy to do, but I guess they are getting what they payed for this system. -- Peter |
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