Friday, August 28, 2009

Under control...

Pilots!

Now that I'm over our initial sticker-shock on our new engines, I've had some time to rationally ponder what we're up to here, policy-wise, and we've reached a decision.

First, thanks to all who joined us in some discussions, both online, email, and here in the office. We in the office sometimes get a little myopic to what life is like on the other side of the counter. We decided that we do not want to interfere with legitimate fun things such as a catalina lunch run, trip to vegas for the weekend, or just monkeying around and visiting new places -- and our proposed policies threw ice water on that sort of flying.

As a result, we have decided that we will make no change to our long-term rental policies. We will instead engage those who are causing the most heartburn individually and continue to work to minimize the problem.

I think with some planes on the line, this will be "enough". The last month around here was pretty mean, however. Sorry for the knee-jerk reaction -- now back to our regularly scheduled FBO :)

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Our pricing changes, as described, will go into effect on Sept. 1. We think they most accurately reflect our reality here, and everybody who I have spoken with has gritted teeth and said it was not unreasonable. :)

If an opportunity arises to lower rates, you know we will capitalize on that and pass on any savings.




In more cheerful news, our chief mechanic and all-around swell people person Curt is selling his C150. Here's what I know:

Cessna 274 is a Blue and white C150, well cared for by doting mechanic. Fresh engine earlier this year by our same gurus, Corona Engines and the talented Ben Ocon.

Curt is asking $28,000 and will include your private pilot's license into the deal (gas, choice of our CFIs, materials, the works!)

If you'd like to buy your own stuff, he's asking $25,000.

Drop me an Email if you'd like me to put you in touch. We would be buying 274 if we were not otherwise engaged in selling 85Y. :)



Some maintenance goodies:

Cessna 1ES is in the 100hr doldrums. She is forecast to be out all week.

We are off to fetch Cessna 25R next week. She will be flying in Corona next week on her new powertrain.

Cessna 68U will undergo 100hr the week after next. When everything else is done. So October.
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That's all I know for the moment. It's warm! Drink water, fly west, fly high -- anything to avoid the hairdryer on the ground. Oh my!

Blue Skies,

- Mike

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Counting beans!

Pilots!

It's autumn, and two of our planes are returning in TOP fighting form with shiny new engines! The C150 is running faboo, and 25R is due to be fetched and broken in next week!

The less awesome news, of course, is that the office bean-counters are making faces. We work very hard to bring you the best service and best rates in Los Angeles, and to maintain that (Read: stay in business), we revise rates twice a year. Additionally, we contemplate policies and procedures, and see what we're doing well and what we're doing wrong.

We enjoy involving you, our friends and pilots, in the conversation, and we like to listen. So here's your chance :)

As always, we do not like surprising pilots with changes in pricing, and we work hard to minimize the impact to everyone. Here is the rate grandfathering policy we have in place, which would continue for any changes to rates we enact:

If you have purchased a block of time recently, meaning in the last 2 months (and meaning 10 hours of an affected aircraft), you will remain on the current block rates for 2 months.

If you have purchased a package full prepay recently, you will remain on the current block rates for 6 months.

If you have been letting the $100 minimum account balance ride (which a few folks do), grandfathering would not apply to you. You may, of course, purchase a fresh 10-hour block and ride that wave for 2 months.

This policy seems fair, and has served us well -- and none of us like a surprise.

Our proposed rate structure for Autumn 2009 looks like this:

Cessna 630: $64 block, $79 retail
Cessna 68U: unchanged
Cessna 20U: unchanged
Cessna 739: unchanged
Cessna 1ES: unchanged
Cessna 17J: We have decided to "split the difference" with Julie. We are trying her at $119 block, $149 retail.
Cutlass 25R: $109 block, $129 retail
Twin Comanche 85Y: unchanged (to be removed from the schedule/website shortly -- you win, Anonymous :) )
Duchess 777: $199 block, $229 retail (yes, we are shopping for a Duchess)

We are planning for these rates to go into effect on September 1. If you have comments, questions, or concerns -- we'd love to hear them, as nothing is in stone yet! Drop me or the office a line, or grab us next time you're in the office!



And on the policy front... some thoughts:

As you can imagine, we play a very delicate balancing act with aircraft utilization. When utilization of an aircraft goes down, prices end up going up, which drives utilization down... it's a strange game. We have been very good at "priming" the utilization through amazing block rates, which drives up utilization, and drives prices down. The only people complaining are the overworked maintenance crew, so we keep them in a steady supply of adult beverages, shiny tools, and cash and prizes.

One of the latest challenges to our utilization strategy has been pilots who book large swaths of time on the schedule, and then only fly a small amount. We've been struggling with this one for a few weeks now, and Carlos came up with an interesting idea:

Why not just charge $10/hr for the wasted/idle booking portion?

I made a face when he suggested it, because I like the idea of flying a plane to a new place for a burger or something. The truth is, though, this does put an undue burden on the flightline, and the people enjoying this service should pay a little extra, rather than penalize the rest of us. I'd probably tweak it like this:

The minimum expected time is 1/2 of the booked time.

If you book 4 hours of time, we will expect you to fly half of it, or 2 hours.

If you do not, for some acceptable reason such as adverse weather, not feeling well, your dog ate your sectional, etc., then fair game, no problem, no charge, hope you feel better, etc. We're not evil.

But if you just wanted the luxury of having one of our planes out, and you booked that same 4 hours, we'll expect a minimum flight time of 2 hours. If you only fly 1.5, we will charge you an extra $5 (1/2 hour @ $10/hr).

It's like the cab that sits around waiting for you -- but WAY cheaper.

Continuing the idea, if you book for 10 hours, and only fly for 2, we will charge you an extra $30.

It's interesting. It's not a policy, it's only an idea. My thinking is that it will cut abusive bookings for those who have loose schedules and just want the plane "at some point in this timeframe", and for those who truly want to have access to our planes, "just in case", $10/hr is the best deal around, I think.

Whatcha think? Carlos might be onto something here.



Enough of that. Great weather abounds lately! Here are some maintenance updates:

Cessna 630 has been deemed "broken in" and is available for your rental needs. We are replacing the intercom box with something a little smaller -- there's not enough room in that plane for a big box.

Cessna 68U is down pending her 100hr. We expect her to sit on the sidelines for a bit.

Cessna 20U is back from 100hr, however, we are peeking at one thing we weren't too sure about. We've decided we didn't like it after all. (it was a loose rivet on the bottom of the rudder fairing)

Cessna 739 is in Las Vegas, on her way here from Seattle. She will be in Annual, with an expected departure of "mid September"

Cessna 1ES is down for her 100hr.

Cessna 17J is cruising. Thanks, Julie!

Cessna 25R's engine is complete - we will be paying her a visit in Oakland next week. It's been too long, 25R! She will enjoy a new prop, governor, engine, and quite a few other mechanical doodads.

Piper 85Y will complete her Annual tomorrow. She will then be placed up for sale.



As you know, our web server was taken down in a bad way by the Win32.Virut virus. This is the computer equivalent of "Flesh-Eating Hantavirus + bonus crotch kick" apparently. No data was lost, but we are on our development server for the moment, while I napalm, er, quarantine our existing server.

Any data entered during the downtime (Thursday AM - Sunday AM) is being re-entered by the office staff from backups. The good news is that the servers were only up for about 3 hours during that time, so only a few folks are affected.

...after 5 years of yelp-free service, I guess I can allow for this tantrum. We've switched antivirus programs, too, as ours did not do the trick.

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...That's all I know for now. Thanks for reading (if you made it that far) -- and we'd love your feedback, be it good bad or ugly.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Woof!

Pilots!

Thanks for bearing with us during the 2-day downtime of our servers. Someone, who will not be named, but whose initials are Mike B, accidentally loaded a virus onto the server while testing some new PDF generation functionality. The virus invited all of its friends, and before long, there was a malware rave going on in our server.

It took 2 days of trying to save the thing before I decided a new server would need to be installed. We did that this morning, and all is well. I have chastised myself roundly for this. Doh!



In some other news:

Cessna 630 is flying around the patch lately. We have put 5 of her needed 10 hours for engine break-in, and will then be releasing her into the wild. Expect her return on Tuesday! Awesome!

Cessna 68U will be down for some time, we'd like to give her a thorough drubbing after her uneventful flight to new york and back.

Cessna 20U is back from her 100hr.

Cessna 739 will be in for Annual on Thursday. She is in Seattle currently, buzzing around. Her return is not slated until Week 2 of September

Cessna 1ES will *either* go down for 100hr tomorrow (Monday), or she will be relegated to "solo only" tomorrow afternoon. We are not sure yet.

Cessna 17J is cruising.

Cessnas 68U, 20U, and 1ES have all had their Pitot-Static tests completed.

Cessna 25R has her engine complete! We just need to find time to get to Oakland and install the thing now. We are hoping for tomorrow or Tuesday to make the trek.


We are considering some dramatic changes to our fleet.

Cessna 68U will be due for engine overhaul under flight school care in spring. An individual owner, however, would likely enjoy 5 years or more of puttering around in 68U. As such, we are considering selling her, even though she is "dialled in" quite nicely (as evidenced by her trouble-free ride across the country) -- she is aging and will need better care than our students can offer. :) We will sell her gone-over and airworthy, of course.

We are considering either a package deal (ie "25k and 100 hours' CFI time to get your license"), or just an outright sale (ie 22k). We would likely replace her with a C150.

Feel free to email me or contact any of us in the office to inquire further.

Also...

We are considering trading out 85Y, who has been 99% done with her annual now for weeks, for a Duchess. As such, we'd like to offer her up for sale, if anyone is interested, at 74k. We would gladly include 50 hours of MEI time with this sale, to secure your Multi-Engine rating (either PP-AMEL or CP-AMEL) as well as any hours your insurance carrier would require to give a good quote.

Feel free to email me or contact any of us in the office to inquire further. :)

==

If you are returning from a flight, we are now monitoring UNICOM for fuel. Please put the plane back on the line, but feel free to call up "Corona Chevron" on 122.7 with a fuel order. This works well when you're on the 45 -- don't clog the frequency with the request, however. Just say "need fuel at the flight school line" or similar, and with luck, our driver will be right over.

It will be nice to have planes again. Nice weather lately, too.

Blue Skies,

- Mike