BTW
Manufacturer:
PIPER AIRCRAFT CORP
Model:
PA-34-200
Serial number:
34-7450107
Engine type:
Piston
No of engines:
2
Aircraft first registered in Australia:
3 June 1974
Year of manufacture:
1974
Registration holder:
TISDALL BTW PTY LTD U 2 224 Qantas Ave ARCHERFIELD QLD 4108 Australia
Registration holder commencement date:
9 May 2016
Registered operator:
FLIGHT ONE (SERVICES) PTY LTD 224 Qantas Ave ARCHERFIELD QLD 4108 Australia
Registered operator commencement date:
9 May 2016

From: Mike Borgelt
Sent: Wednesday, February 1, 2017 11:39 PM
To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] MEMBERSHIP AND A WORLD REVIEW

That was an hour or two after finding one that had been blown over out the back 
of a hangar a couple of years before. It was still on the register. A 
Kookaburra BTW.

Mike

On 1 Feb 2017, at 9:07 PM, Mike Borgelt <[email protected]> wrote:


  I've pushed a hangar door open and had pieces of a glider still on the 
register fall out of the rafters

  Mike

  On 1 Feb 2017, at 9:02 PM, Mark Newton <[email protected]> wrote:


    Registration doesn’t expire, so an aircraft stays on the register even if 
it’s wrecked in a blown-over trailer in a corner of a gliding field that its 
deceased owner hasn’t visited for ten years.

    The real point of interest is the number of form-2 kits the GFA sells each 
year.

    Mandy Temple’s “Mande-news” on June 10 last year included an extract from 
the GFA’s Salesforce database, which said there were 738 gliders with a current 
form-2 as of that date.

    So - slightly over half of the total number of registered gliders are 
airworthy.

    The same extract said 2584 members flew GFA aircraft for 115,100 hours from 
68,200 launches in 2015-16 (based on form-2 returns).  That means every 
airworthy GFA aircraft averaged 156 hours and 92 launches, making the average 
GFA aircraft flight 102 minutes long.

    Not sure what to make of that. Must be some absolute bladder-buster long 
endurance flights to compensate for the thousands of 6 minute circuits all the 
winch clubs spend most of the winter flying.

    Also means the average GFA member logs about 45 hours per year. Once again, 
some pilots must be absolutely cranking out the hours to make up for the 
trainees who only log between 5 and 20 hours per year.

    The other weird numbers worth noting: GFA had issued 932 GPCs, and had 189 
AEIs, 97 Level 1 instructors, 306 Level 2 instructors, and 97 Level 3 
instructors. That’s 689 members with instructor ratings (out of 2584 total — 
over a quarter of GFA’s membership base), and each Level 3 having their very 
own personal Level 1 to train.

    Let me put it another way: There’s an instructor for every three 
non-instructor GFA members.

    The ratio is even stranger if you compare instructor headcount to GPC 
holders, and observe that 689 of those 932 GPCs are actually supposed to be 
instructors.

    I reckon GFA members get instructor ratings instead of Level-2 Independent 
Ops.  If you want to fly club aircraft whenever you want without needing 
anyone’s permission, nearly 700 members have worked out that it’s easier to get 
an instructor rating than a Level 2 Independent Operator rating. Also easier to 
get a crew organized if you’re an instructor and you offer to run a day.

    That’s a perverse outcome, isn't it?  I mean, in an ideal world, it 
wouldn’t be that way?

      - mark



      On 1 Feb 2017, at 6:04 PM, [email protected] wrote:





      From the aircraft register of  2013

      1220 gliders and motor gliders

      950 privately owned

      270 owned by clubs/cadets/societies etc.



      last year

      1276 gliders and motor gliders (+4.6%, 56 actual)

      981 privately owned (+3.3%, 31 actual)

      295 owned by clubs/cadets/societies etc. (+9.3%, 25 actual)



      Only about 3 years difference, I'd be reluctant to say too much about 
trends, have to go back and dig up a really old one. But private ownership (in 
absolute terms) increasing more than club ownership (and as others will point 
out, only about half of the gliders in Australia are given an annual in any one 
year, so it all may be moot anyway).

      gliders on the register newer than 3 years old in 2016 - (64 total)

      36 private

      28 club

      Of those 64 new gliders 18 "pure" (mostly DG1000s, and 10 of them air 
cadets), 46 with some sort of motor. That's a clue to the future right there.





      For pilot flying times, much more difficult to get a handle on.








        ----- Original Message -----
        From:
        "Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia." 
@lists.base64.com.au>

        To:
        "Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia."

        Cc:

        Sent:
        Wed, 1 Feb 2017 14:36:35 +1100

        Subject:
        Re: [Aus-soaring] MEMBERSHIP AND A WORLD REVIEW


        to put a different spin on it, how about asking some different questions

        1) how many gliders are there now?

        2) how many are privately owned (percentage change)?

        3) have the annual flown hours per pilot gone up or down?







        @johnroake.com>@lists.base64.com.au>
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