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Settling a bet on air taxis and pilot entrepreneurs

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This starts with an unrealistic assumption

To fly 900 hours in the charter market on just pop up business would be unbelievable. You would be gone almost everyday of the year just to get this done. The average charter flys out in the morning about two hours max. then you sit until meetings are done and return late in the evening. So just to continue the math 4 hours a day is about what you would do on a good day. 900 Hours divided by 4 per day equals 225 days. Last time I heard the normal business world considers 200 days the average productivity of an employee in the normal 9-5 world.

Furthermore if I could get 900 hours productivity out of my training cost for a crew on normal charter rates I would be one happy business owner.

Just my .02

PS would love to debate this futher, have lots more if you are interested
 
Rez O. Lewshun said:
No baggage..just calling it like I see it.....another factor in devaluing the pilot profession....
Do you really think some millionaire is going to take time out from being a millionaire to fly his own VLJ around on somebody else's 135 certificate? NO! It would cost him valuable time from making money when he get some schmuck to do it for 25,000 a year.
 
What about the repositioning legs?

Does this 900 hours a year include the repo legs that will HAVE to be flown to get to the next "fare"? I would think that this 900 hours per year would have to be occupied hours, anyone agree? That being said, that airplane is going to be flown into the ground hours wise and end up sitting in a hangar for quite a long period for maintenance. Between scheduled inspections (100 hour/annual/phases), ADs that are ineviatable, and all of the little pop up things that break a one airplane/owner operation is not going to be able to make any money, in my opinion. Let us not forget the fact that not many airplanes, especially a brand new airplane design, can fly 1000+ a year with a 98% disptach rate.
I'm just a stupid frac pilot, but I do get to see how important it is to have core airplanes to cover the maintenacne and high use periods that do come along with this business. I am all for hard work trying to get a business off of the ground, but lots of sweat equity will be put into this type of flying, for very little return.

I guess my statement could be summed up by asking: 'Where is the money for the second airplane?'
 
FN FAL said:
Do you really think some millionaire is going to take time out from being a millionaire to fly his own VLJ around on somebody else's 135 certificate? NO! It would cost him valuable time from making money when he get some schmuck to do it for 25,000 a year.

That is my point super chief..... a ton of schmucks flying single pilot VSJ for dirt wages.... the profession going D-O-W-N!!!!
 
Sorry change agent, it seems most have mis-understood your questions. Yes I would serve as a pilot, manager, etc. for a small salary…as an investment. In turn a piece of the profits and/or company would be a sweet deal as long as it was a successful startup. Do you have one you want to talk to me about? PM me if you do!
 
What a scam! this has been going on in the trucking industry for years! Owner operators, buy your job by buying the rig, Get a split of what is made- of course your cut pays taxes, maintenance, fees, expenses, etc. My cousin just parked his rig and went back to a regular Monday to Friday gig because he didn't have a life, or make any money after expenses.

For a side note- think taxi drivers, you know those smelly guys who are asleep at the wheel because they have to live in their cab in order to make money. The cars with no suspension and no brakes.

VLJ's-the future smoking holes in the ground.
 
Skytaxi

Skytaxi and Dayjet I think are planning to do that very thing. These companies are offering standardised training, maintenance, financing and dispatch. The owner positions his/her plane at their home airport and receives a schedule from HQ and fly's the line usually ending up back at home. Its a great idea. Everyone makes a little bit of money. It could bring the cost of charter way down to middle class level. In the end you would own your own jet. I think it will be huge.

SkyLine
 
Skyline said:
Skytaxi and Dayjet I think are planning to do that very thing. These companies are offering standardised training, maintenance, financing and dispatch. The owner positions his/her plane at their home airport and receives a schedule from HQ and fly's the line usually ending up back at home. Its a great idea. Everyone makes a little bit of money. It could bring the cost of charter way down to middle class level. In the end you would own your own jet. I think it will be huge.

SkyLine

I am sorry, but I have yet to see anything that indicates that this is how DayJet intends to operate. DayJet will own and operate their own fleet. From what I have seen, DayJet has the only viable plan that I have seen for operating an Air Taxi company. They have recognized that the problem with profitability in the air taxi world is scheduling effeciency. They have spent millions of dollars building the scheduling system to make this work.

As for as SkyTaxi goes, this floundering operation has been trying to get off of the ground for years. The problem with their model and some of the others that I have seen, is that it is predicated on a franchise system. The FAA will never allow a Franchise system. There is no way that any type of Franchise system will offer the Operational Control necessary to gain FAA approval. If you try to put each airplane on a separate certificate, the overhead and startup costs will be astronomical.
 
I agree with surveypilot. Besides, I have no desire to buy an airplane - shares in a sound, ethical company might interest me though. I'd give it a shot with DayJet for sure. However, I'd still want to see that they - or any other company - would be willing to make a respectable investment in my training and base compensation from the outset, and that they were prepared to sustain that investment for the duration while all the wheels are being set in motion. At the first sign of despair and compromising those fundamental notions, I'd lose interest and move on.

I had a class project in college where we 'built an airline', and the one thing I came away with was the understanding that if you have to do anything even slightly half-a$$ed, you might as well stay in bed. It takes a lot of money and other resources to play this game. And there aren't any shortcuts. On the other hand, if you're committed to doing everything right, even when it hurts, and you have the means, there's no reason why a good idea rooted in solid fundamental principles shouldn't work (still doesn't mean it will though).

I wonder if ChangeAgent is who I think he might be. I'll echo PropsR4Boats - you got something to talk about, send me a PM. I admit I don't really belong in this forum, but saw this thread and it piqued my interest.
 

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