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#101
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Gig 601XL Builder wrote:
That's the objective. But te real outcome will be more old guys who are scared they are going to loose their medicals. In other words: a holding action. - Andrew |
#102
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My most expensive purchases have been my car, my current house and my
plane-- in descending order. Sheesh! What do you drive? Where do you live? Jose -- Quantum Mechanics is like this: God =does= play dice with the universe, except there's no God, and there's no dice. And maybe there's no universe. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#103
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![]() That's the objective. But the real outcome will be more old guys who are scared they are going to loose their medicals. That's going to be a major consitutuency of the Sport Pilot rule -- people with PP's and other advanced ratings who "retire" into LSAs. This will change when the LSAs start showing up (which, in reality, they have not. J3 Cubs are not going to attract the younger crowd), the CFIs are ready to teach the new standard (with they are not. obviously, they have the skills, but they don't have the syllabi, etc.), and most importantly, the insurance companies know what to do with the LS rule, which they don't. That latter one could sink the whole deal. So far, reports from people who run FBOs do not sound so good. -- dave j |
#104
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In this vein, I'd also say that flight training can be frustrating.
There are... setbacks. For example, you might not learn a maneuver as quickly as you thought you would. Or, you're busy for a while, don't make it to the airport, and when you do get back in the plane, you're relearning things you thought you had done. In my flight training there were a couple of plateaus. These were frustrating. I wonder how many people drop out, not after solo, but after hitting one of those and starting to wonder when they're finally going to 'finish'. It doesn't help that CFIs (at least the three I've worked with) are loathe to offer encouragement. For some reason, CFI don't like to say "you'll get it next time." I will say that I think I'm seeing some real ageism from the oldsters on this board who think that kids today are somehow made of lesser stuff than kids in their day. That's ridiculous. For one, it's not like everyone in their 70s today has learned to fly -- far from it. And the economics (military and otherwise) were different when most of them learned. And finally, kids today have many more activities competing for their attention. That's not the kids fault. It's just life. -- dave j |
#105
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I don't mean to psychoanalyze, but your son's friend's statement seems
suspect. He apparently has spent some time practicing simulated ILSes into JFK (not to mention paying for and assembling a spiffy flight simulator), so he must have found it somewhat entertaining on the computer. How could it have been less entertaining in a real aircraft? I guess the cost benefit of fun/effort may be better on a computer sim than in a real aircraft, but that doesn't make it boring, just not the best "investment." If that's the case, the GA needs to understand that equation, and start to tweak it. -- dave j |
#106
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Actually ,
The insurance companies are having trouble with insurance on taildraggers for ALL pilots not just sport pilots. But the flight schools insurance is covering sport pilot students as well as other students...and no one is covered in a taildragger. If flight schools buy Ercoupes is solves the problem ![]() they will buy one eventually. I had no trouble getting my own insurance as a sport pilot student and they just can't wait to do more biz with me when I buy my own plane. I don't see any difference in my first hours of flight training and a PPL's training. Risky for all new pilots. CFI's are more than willing to teach sport pilots I have found. yep the rules need some ironing out, but sport pilot training is happening. The biggest hurdle is the AIRPLANE! When insurance balks the old taildraggers from any pilot soloing in them, it leaves a flight school with it's hands tied. Most flight schools won't chunk out 80G for a new sport plane , and few sport pilot students will buy their own at that price. So either some cheaper sport planes come on line or the whole thing will just be a retirement program for the rich type private pilots who can not get a medical anymore. Not alot of flight schools go out and buy the Diamonds and such either, they have the good old all purpose trainers that they pick up relatively cheap. True some areas may have the high tech stuff just over flowing but that is the exception rather than the rule. In NE TN I know of one Cirrus that is available for rent....still lots and lots of C150's C172 and Cherokee and Warriors . When everyone that wants to fly builds their own plane then maybe the prices will come down ![]() Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech wrote in message ups.com... That's the objective. But the real outcome will be more old guys who are scared they are going to loose their medicals. That's going to be a major consitutuency of the Sport Pilot rule -- people with PP's and other advanced ratings who "retire" into LSAs. This will change when the LSAs start showing up (which, in reality, they have not. J3 Cubs are not going to attract the younger crowd), the CFIs are ready to teach the new standard (with they are not. obviously, they have the skills, but they don't have the syllabi, etc.), and most importantly, the insurance companies know what to do with the LS rule, which they don't. That latter one could sink the whole deal. So far, reports from people who run FBOs do not sound so good. -- dave j |
#107
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![]() Unfortunately, flying can have no lasting appeal for the casual pilot masses, until it DOES have some reasonably economic utility, and right now it simply does not I think it is essentially true that flying has limited economic utility. Pilots love to argue this point, but I think most of us know this to be true. I can't tell you the countless hours I have spent trying to plan flights that "show" how convenient and useful an airplane is. It's work! However, you can go two ways with this: 1. fix the economics, show how the family plane can be like the family car 2. pitch flying as an avocation, something done for entertainment. In the latter scenario, flying doesn't need to make economic sense, just not be overly burdensome. However, I'm not sure how many people you can recruit with 2. I like the former scenario, but the economics, as near as I can tell, are getting worse, not better. -- dave j |
#108
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![]() It's not the age of the planes, per se. It's: - the crappy cracked headliner, plastic trim, etc. - minor bits of hangar rash that some A&P signed off as flyable. - torn up seats - musty "grandpa" smell (perhaps with cigar thrown in) - powdering old paint job - list of "minor" squawks that will *never* be addressed because they're not "safety of flight" - paleozoic avionics If FBOs would just "spiff up" their planes, they could get much of the benefit of new AC without the major investment. After all, the new AC perform similarly. I don't understand why so many FBOs have an attitude towards maintenance that is basically "maintain aiworthiness; nothing else matters." -- dave j PS -- I've taken most of my friends and s.o.'s up over the years, and everyone comments on that musty smell. What's the deal with that? Can't something be done. I'm not kidding. A little can of "new airplane smell" perhaps? |
#109
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Hee Hee,
I laugh but it isOHHHH so true!!!! My pet peeve is the ailerons with stop drilled cracks , not once mind you! Just replace the dang skin already GEESH! 100 hour inspection my butt! I wouldn't sign half of them off. Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech wrote in message oups.com... It's not the age of the planes, per se. It's: - the crappy cracked headliner, plastic trim, etc. - minor bits of hangar rash that some A&P signed off as flyable. - torn up seats - musty "grandpa" smell (perhaps with cigar thrown in) - powdering old paint job - list of "minor" squawks that will *never* be addressed because they're not "safety of flight" - paleozoic avionics If FBOs would just "spiff up" their planes, they could get much of the benefit of new AC without the major investment. After all, the new AC perform similarly. I don't understand why so many FBOs have an attitude towards maintenance that is basically "maintain aiworthiness; nothing else matters." -- dave j PS -- I've taken most of my friends and s.o.'s up over the years, and everyone comments on that musty smell. What's the deal with that? Can't something be done. I'm not kidding. A little can of "new airplane smell" perhaps? |
#110
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He apparently has spent some time practicing simulated ILSes
into JFK (not to mention paying for and assembling a spiffy flight simulator), so he must have found it somewhat entertaining on the computer. How could it have been less entertaining in a real aircraft? Reset button. Thunderstorms. Simulated emergencies. Jose -- Quantum Mechanics is like this: God =does= play dice with the universe, except there's no God, and there's no dice. And maybe there's no universe. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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