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#13
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In the Midwest, you can usually follow a line of thunderstorms (albeit at a
distance) and still make your destination even if a bit late. Many people just park it for a few hours and let the storms roll through, then continue their trip in the beautiful clear skies behind the front. -- Jim Carter Seen on a bumper sticker: If you can read this, thank a teacher If you can read this in English, thank a soldier. "Richard Kaplan" wrote in message s.com... wrote in message ... missed connections. All that said, the airlines still offer higher reliability of safely getting to where you want to go more or less when you want to be there, but if you use the flexibility inherent in flying your own light airplane (NOT a rental!), the difference isn't all THAT huge. I don't count a flight being cancelled by airlines and getting there 6 hours later as a cancellation -- you still get there. Airlines can, indeed, plan routes around weather; in fact, an airliner at 500 knots can do this much, much easier than I can do at 160 knots. The difference between airline reliability and general aviation realiability is VERY significant anywhere except the Southwest U.S. Also Florida is very reliable except during the afternoon in the 6-month rainy season. Especially if you fly a non-deiced airplane, you can be grounded for several days in a row in the Northeast or Midwest or Northwest due to icing. In the summertime, frontal thunderstorms can easily prevent completion of a cross-country trip for 1-2 days. Also what happens if you have an 8-hour cross country trip you plan to start at 10AM but weather does not clear until 10PM? The airlines will get a fresh crew to do the night flight. Will you start a long night flight at 10PM single-pilot IFR after you have been up all day checking weather? There are LOTS of advantages to GA travel and I do it all the time... but the only realistic way to do it is to either be prepared to rent a car or to schedule departure/arrival windows which are 24-36 hours wide depending on the season and the capabilities of the pilot and airplane. On the other hand, a rather novel use of general aviation when weather is bad is that you may be able to fly to an inexpensive airline airport such as a Southwest hub and continue your trip from there. When I had to cancel my trip from Pittsburgh to Orlando due to 2 hurricanes, I flew my airplane to Norfolk Virginia and got the family $69 tickets to continue the flight from there to Orlando; that was immensely less expense than the commercial fare from Pittsburgh to Orlando and a strategy I will not forget in the future. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
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