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Is It Time to Level Off?

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The author, a lifelong aircraft owner, traditionally viewed significant airplane expenses as emotionally gratifying investments, but now, despite being financially stable, faces "fiscal fretting" due to rising maintenance and fuel costs for his turboprop.
  • He reluctantly abandoned his dream of owning a Cessna Mustang jet and is grappling with the emotional challenge of potentially needing to downgrade his aircraft rather than continuing his history of upgrading.
  • A practical financial analysis with his wife confirmed the irrationality of "trading up" for a more fuel-efficient plane, calculating it would take over 100 years to break even on the investment.
  • Despite recognizing financial realities and finding contentment in other areas of his life, the author struggles to let go of his aviation fantasies, clinging to the dream of ever-increasing aircraft capability, speed, and luxury.
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Never have I regretted spending money on airplanes. The costs for upgrades and maintenance may have been prodigious, but they always felt good. The airplane was either improved or restored. I never questioned these investments. Same for hangar, insurance and fuel. I wanted the airplane protected indoors, I wanted to protect the people flying in it and I wanted to use it. Even in the days when I had bought a new house and neglected to sell the old one and had a note on a Cessna P210, I wasn’t scared and I wasn’t desperate. The old house sold after a year, the note got paid off eventually and all during that time I was high and pressurized. I’ve liked looking at the logo of the Jeppesen bill or the invoice from Aircraft Engineering. Rather than a depressing recurrent expense of little recognizable worth like health insurance, say, I always felt good, solid, right about airplane costs. No doubt this kind of thinking could have been easily criticized from a financial point of view, but it was unassailable emotionally.

For the first time in my flying life, though, I’ve become concerned about money. I am not wealthy by today’s standards, though I am rich (there’s a difference). I’ve got more money now than I’ve ever had before. The kids are all married and out of graduate school. It is a very good part of life; sort like high-speed cruise. I’m 61. I still enjoy work and I am very well paid for what I do. I am lucky, very lucky. I have always sought to own the most magnificent airplane I could afford and, until recently, even our Cheyenne seemed a reasonable reach. But a recent hot section on a PT-6 engine and the price of fuel have prompted significant fiscal fretting.

FLYING Staff

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