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#11
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"G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... The Weiss Family wrote: I then tried to estimate annual costs. You've left out the "banks" for replacement or repair of avionics and overhaul of engines and props. The overhaul bank on an O-320 will be about $9/flight hour. It'll be more for that 182. George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. I was assuming engine reserve, etc would be part of the $10K/yr maintenance. Although possible, I don't think the annual would be $10K year after year. Does that seem reasonable? I've never owned, so it was just a guess on my part. Adam |
#12
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PInc972390 wrote:
It turns out there is a flying club based here that I didn't even know about! My experience is Best $ 12000.00 182 in 1985, whole owner, sold in 1987 for $ 12000.00 flew 800 hours with no major repairs. Close Second $ 20000.00 Aero Commander 100. 1999 till present. Have flown about 1000 hours with radio up grades mostly. Medium $ 15000.00 Mooney in 1982, one other partner. Worked OK but partners Wife kept chaos going on with Bank and CPA. Sold in 1983 for same money. 100 hrs annual only. Worst $5000.00 in a flying club in 1987 for a 3 year old 172. Beautiful airplane. Flew about 100 hours at prices just below rental rates. Two Doctors, Hospital Administrator, Head Nurse ran it out of gas stalled and flipped it on it's back killing all four. TERRIBLE, especially when finished with the lawsuits, just because you knew them. Glad to forfeit my $ 5000.00 Initial, The maintence retainer and the Lawyer fees. If you get into a club be sure it is chartered and has the language to protect you. Our club is incorporated. Is that what you mean by "chartered?" Matt |
#13
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Our club is incorporated. Is that what you mean by "chartered?"
Same thing, old timer slang language. |
#14
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"G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... The Weiss Family wrote: I then tried to estimate annual costs. You've left out the "banks" for replacement or repair of avionics and overhaul of engines and props. The overhaul bank on an O-320 will be about $9/flight hour. It'll be more for that 182. At $80 per hour that should be taken care of - those planes don't burn that much fuel. I agree - this club seems to be rolling in cash or there are early members who have not contributed at this level. Just for grins I ran a 50k loan at 15 years for 9% - you can do better with an equity loan, but the payments are roughly 500 per month. Add $200 for tie down and insurance (fixed gear single) and that is about $700 per month. Seems to me the original poster might want to consider an alternative. I would start my own "flying club" or partnership in his/her position. With 3-4 people in the partnership you might have more access to the plane than the 15 person club with 2 planes and have lower insurance as well. I round up the monthly costs to $900 to be conservative and drop the hourly charge a bit too. With 3-4 people that means about 200 to 300 per month fee with lower hourly charge, equity in the plane and probably more access to the plane. just my opinion. (own a grumman cheetah) George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. |
#15
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The Weiss Family wrote:
Thanks for the info. If anyone else has any more numbers, that would be interesting as well. My next move is to ask the club for their financials and charter (if they have one). Thanks again, I belong to a club that has just over 200 members and 9 airplanes (10 currently but we're selling one that we just bought a replacement for). Initation fee depends on the type of aircraft you want to fly and is refundable when you leave: $300 for the 152s, $600 for the Warriors, $1200 for the Mooneys. There's another $100 or so of nonrefundable fees when you join, we do a driver license check and some other checks that this pays for. Monthly dues are $45. Hourly cost is $72 for the Warriors, $53 for the 152s, and $109 for the Mooneys. All wet. All club members are named insureds on the club's policy. We have our own hangar/clubhouse that we built on the ramp. Compared to this your proposed club looks very expensive, but they do have a better member to airplane ratio. On beautiful weekends it can get tough to schedule a plane in my club. Here's our website: http://www.wingsofcarolina.org |
#16
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With this high an entry fee, it sounds like you are getting partial
ownership. This is good and bad so you really need to read the charter, but if some other entity is making a profit on this deal, then you need to see what happens to your 4k if they disappear. You also want to know what your liability is should another member run into the proverbial school bus full of kids. Get a lawyer. That is a great deal on the 182 ( I have heard good reviews of that conversion), but the Tiger rate seems high unless it is really nice. PS Do you live in Minden or Tahoe? I an jealous either way. "The Weiss Family" wrote in message ... All, We had an open house at our local airport here in Minden, NV (MEV) today. It turns out there is a flying club based here that I didn't even know about! They have a late 60's 182 with a Pertesen conversion (260 HP, I think) and a 70's Grumman Tiger. I think those are two great planes, but I was wondering a bit about the costs. They cost is $4000 to join (returned when you leave). Then $179 monthly dues. And then $80/hr wet rate for either plane. At first I thought, well I pay $89/hr for a 172 rental right now. $80/hr is a deal. Then I added on the $179/mo. If I only fly 50 hrs per year, my effective hourly rate is about $122. If I fly 100 hrs per year my effective hourly rate is about $101. That's not bad because I'd be able to take the plane on trips, etc. What really got me thinking is, "Where does all the money go?" There are 15 members of this club. If each is paying $179/mo and flying 50 hrs/yr, then the club is bringing in about $92K/yr. So just for round numbers, let's assume each plane brings in about $50K/yr. I then tried to estimate annual costs. I tried to figure accurately or high on costs to give them the benefit of the doubt. Anually: Insurance: $10K per plane Maintenance: $10K per plane Fuel/Oil: $13K per plane (400hrs x 2.75/gal x 12gal/hr) Hangar: $3K per plane Loan?: $10K per plane (not sure if there is a loan) TOTAL: $46K So, I guess I need more information, but it looks like I'm answering my own question. However, if there is $$$ left over, where does it usually go? Is a flying club a "for profit" business? Thanks, Adam |
#17
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"Dude" wrote in message ... With this high an entry fee, it sounds like you are getting partial ownership. This is good and bad so you really need to read the charter, but if some other entity is making a profit on this deal, then you need to see what happens to your 4k if they disappear. You also want to know what your liability is should another member run into the proverbial school bus full of kids. Get a lawyer. That is a great deal on the 182 ( I have heard good reviews of that conversion), but the Tiger rate seems high unless it is really nice. PS Do you live in Minden or Tahoe? I an jealous either way. I'm in Minden. |
#18
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If you play around with the hours, add maitenance reserves (perhaps
including paint/interior) you can probably get to the number. $101-122/hr sounds about right if you include reserves. $250/month sounds low for a hanger an MEV. Mike MU-2 "The Weiss Family" wrote in message ... All, We had an open house at our local airport here in Minden, NV (MEV) today. It turns out there is a flying club based here that I didn't even know about! They have a late 60's 182 with a Pertesen conversion (260 HP, I think) and a 70's Grumman Tiger. I think those are two great planes, but I was wondering a bit about the costs. They cost is $4000 to join (returned when you leave). Then $179 monthly dues. And then $80/hr wet rate for either plane. At first I thought, well I pay $89/hr for a 172 rental right now. $80/hr is a deal. Then I added on the $179/mo. If I only fly 50 hrs per year, my effective hourly rate is about $122. If I fly 100 hrs per year my effective hourly rate is about $101. That's not bad because I'd be able to take the plane on trips, etc. What really got me thinking is, "Where does all the money go?" There are 15 members of this club. If each is paying $179/mo and flying 50 hrs/yr, then the club is bringing in about $92K/yr. So just for round numbers, let's assume each plane brings in about $50K/yr. I then tried to estimate annual costs. I tried to figure accurately or high on costs to give them the benefit of the doubt. Anually: Insurance: $10K per plane Maintenance: $10K per plane Fuel/Oil: $13K per plane (400hrs x 2.75/gal x 12gal/hr) Hangar: $3K per plane Loan?: $10K per plane (not sure if there is a loan) TOTAL: $46K So, I guess I need more information, but it looks like I'm answering my own question. However, if there is $$$ left over, where does it usually go? Is a flying club a "for profit" business? Thanks, Adam |
#19
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It could be $10,000 if you have 15 different pilots who are flying 400hrs/yr
total. Mike MU-2 "The Weiss Family" wrote in message ... "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... The Weiss Family wrote: I then tried to estimate annual costs. You've left out the "banks" for replacement or repair of avionics and overhaul of engines and props. The overhaul bank on an O-320 will be about $9/flight hour. It'll be more for that 182. George Patterson None of us is as dumb as all of us. I was assuming engine reserve, etc would be part of the $10K/yr maintenance. Although possible, I don't think the annual would be $10K year after year. Does that seem reasonable? I've never owned, so it was just a guess on my part. Adam |
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