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#11
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Carlos,
If you want to buy a plane to train in, you have to realize that you probablly should not start with a Cirrus or anything with six seats. I recommend you at least take enough lessons to ensure that the reality of flying small planes does not dampen your enthusiasm. If you then decide you want to buy a plane to train in, you can go a few routes. You can go new or used, and you can go with the manufacturer that you plan to step up to or not. New is cool if you can afford it. Used will save you cash up front as well as it will depreciate less in the short time before you step up. If you want to go new, I recommend at least buying a plane from the manufacturer you plan to step up to. Piper has a good step up plan, and some dealers/brokers will work a step up plan in other makes. If you really want six seats, Cirrus is out. You can get a six seat piper or cessna as a reasonable second plane. If you plan to be crossing water, you will want to work up to a turbine or twin and that will take a while. Here are some example paths in the following format. Up to 100 hours, Up to 200 hours and IFR, When appropriate (could be a while, or you are hiring a pilot to go with you, talk to some instructors and insurance folks). Cessna 172, Cessna 210/206 (maybe you should have even more hours), Cessna Caravan or 400 series. Piper Cherokee (140, warrior, archer), Cherokee six, Piper Seneca or Meridian. Diamond DA20 or DA40, DA42 (150 hours), DJet (800 to 1000?). The Diamond would also be the place to start to work up to Cirrus or Lancair or Mooney (thought the Mooney is more like a piper in many ways, it lands much like the Diamonds. If you are going towards Beech, you could get an older Beech fixed gear to start, or go with Piper. Now that I have said all this, you can actually buy whatever suits you and move up any way you want. If you are really in a hurry though, there is value in staying within a family. As for training, I would recommend US training with Mexico familiarization afterwards. Also, there seems to be enough people coming across the border to buy, but I do not know why. Cessna dealers do not like to sell to Mexicans who plan to take the plane back. So don't tell them you plan to do that. "Carlos Estopier" wrote in message m... Hello: I always had the goal and the illusion of flying on my own, now I have the means to do it... so I have three questions: a) What will be the best choice of airplane, for a firt timmer like myself, considering, price range, flying range and easiness to learn and fly? b) Used or new? c) I also would like to take with me around 6pax with me I live in Mexico City, but my plan is to get all the instruction in the US (Tx, Fl), buy there and bring the aircraft later on to Mexico. Thank you in advance Carlos +52+55+5553-1928 |
#12
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I sort of did the same thing. At 0 Hours, I bought into a 5 way
partnership in a Cherokee 180. Cost was $6000 up front. Then we split everything else but the Gas and a small engine fund. I remember getting frustrated at one point and wishing I did not have the plane during my training. Owning a part of a plane though is one hell of a motivator to complete the training. 800 hours later, I'm glad I stuck it out. Having understanding partners is good too because you have someone experienced helping you look after the plane. My piece of the insurance was a few hundred dollars higher but over all this was the least expensive way to get a license I could find. If you go this route, It goes without saying that the plane is insignificant compared to picking your partners. Wrong partners = hell. Right partners = Great Fun and tons o' saving. Interesting though, having a student as a partner now would give me the willies a bit but since someone cut me some slack, Someday I may need to pay back the favor. Walt Mike Spera wrote in message ... Which comes first, the plane or the license? We chose to buy the plane to train in. Since there were two of us (wife and myself), the cost appeared justified. Also, availability of planes at the local school was spotty and we were not impressed with the condition/appearance of rentals in general. 3 sessions each per week would have racked up about $11,000 in rentals for the year of basic training vs. about $2700 for gas in our plane. We did have all the fixed expenses to pay, like insurance, the note, maintenance, etc. But we still believed it was a good deal. SNIP |
#13
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Walt Beaulieu wrote:
least expensive way to get a license I could find. If you go this route, It goes without saying that the plane is insignificant compared to picking your partners. Wrong partners = hell. Right partners = Great Fun and tons o' saving. Man, that is so true. It can't be emphasized enough. Make sure your partners share your vision about how the airplane is to be used. It may seem like a great deal because "...your partners don't fly very much". That can also mean that they're not interested in maintaining the aircraft to the same standards as someone (you) who flies a lot. Dave Remove SHIRT to reply directly. |
#14
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Thank you all in helping me on this issue, yes I do have a great
partner and he will not fly as much as I intend to, the maintenance cost and interest will be guaranteed on both parties. What we have so far decided is, we will buy a used plane (2 or 3 years), refurbished completely, in the meantime we will start the lessons for the PPL, so when the plane is ready to fly we can start the practice on it, we will let go the Cirrus, because here in Mexico there is not a dealership of it, so it will be a Piper, a Beach or a Cessna. So thank you again for your different point of views. Carlos Walt Beaulieu wrote: least expensive way to get a license I could find. If you go this route, It goes without saying that the plane is insignificant compared to picking your partners. Wrong partners = hell. Right partners = Great Fun and tons o' saving. Man, that is so true. It can't be emphasized enough. Make sure your partners share your vision about how the airplane is to be used. It may seem like a great deal because "...your partners don't fly very much". That can also mean that they're not interested in maintaining the aircraft to the same standards as someone (you) who flies a lot. |
#15
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I have no experience in Mexico specifically, so there may be issues
with which I am unfamiliar, but in general: 1.Start out in a J-3, Super Cub, Citabria or similar if at all possible. Even Air Force UPT grads who started in Tweets develop issues that people who start out in a real trainer don't. 2. If you can afford it get a good instrument simulator , after you are a VFR pilot, and spend a lot of time with it. They have come down in price since the ridiculous old ATC 610. 3. U.S. ideas of how to do things in the warped little fish pond known as general aviation in the US are insurance-driven. Since you are presumably a Mexican national going to be owning a XE-registered airplane, your situation will (may?) differ radically, so don't get caught up on our insurability if you are going to be self-insured or purchasing insurance under what may be wholly different rules. You can afford to put safety ahead of insurability in that case! 4. Ditto the regulations. I have no idea of what regs south of the border are but I know there are differences which may work in your favor. |
#16
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BUY A CESSNA 172 OR CITABRIA FOR TRAINING THEN STEP UP TO A 210 OR
206.YOU WANT A HIGH WING AIRPLANE ALWAYS.NOT A SISSY LOW WING PLANE. *** Sent via http://www.automationtools.com *** Add a newsgroup interface to your website today. |
#17
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flyboy sflyborataol wrote in message ...
BUY A CESSNA 172 OR CITABRIA FOR TRAINING THEN STEP UP TO A 210 OR 206.YOU WANT A HIGH WING AIRPLANE ALWAYS.NOT A SISSY LOW WING PLANE. Boy, I'm glad you set me right on this. All those sissy low wing airplanes I got to fly in the early 80s when you could still do it without buying one-the T-6, T-28, and T-33-did me no good at all. It took that macho Reed STC'd J-3 and a friend's Pietenpol to make a pilot out of me. How could I forget? And that Stearman-let's see, it had a low and a high wing.... Seriously, it doesn't make any difference. Being able to spin does. Maybe in Mexico they still have to spin students? |
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