23 Nov 2025, 23:16 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: 25% Share of a Citation III. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 12:13 |
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Joined: 08/13/14 Posts: 540 Post Likes: +261
Aircraft: Cessna T206H
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Guys, my brother in law is considering a share in an '84 CItation. He knows nothing about airplanes and I suspect this is somewhat of midlife crisis deal, but regardless he needs help so I thought I'd jump in. I fly a 206 and know nothing about jets....zero, zip, zilch. Please pardon my ignorance but I'd like to give him some valid reasons to not do this, so I need advice/opinions. Without getting too in depth, what is everyone's general opinion of this plane: 1984 Citation III w/8000 hrs AFTT with both engines appearing to be original w/8000 hrs each (guess that's possible but isn't that ALOT of time?). It is enrolled in Cessna Maintenance program. What are some realistic operating costs and what should he expect when the time comes to part ways with his share? Thank u gentlemen!
Edit:change title
Last edited on 22 Oct 2015, 15:48, edited 2 times in total.
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a Citation 650. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 14:55 |
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Joined: 01/31/09 Posts: 5193 Post Likes: +3038 Location: Northern NJ
Aircraft: SR22;CJ2+;C510
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Username Protected wrote: Guys, my brother in law is considering a share in an '84 CJ. He knows nothing about airplanes and I suspect this is somewhat of midlife crisis deal, but regardless he needs help so I thought I'd jump in. I fly a 206 and know nothing about jets....zero, zip, zilch. Please pardon my ignorance but I'd like to give him some valid reasons to not do this, so I need advice/opinions. Without getting too in depth, what is everyone's general opinion of this plane: 1984 Citation III w/8000 hrs AFTT with both engines appearing to be original w/8000 hrs each (guess that's possible but isn't that ALOT of time?). It is enrolled in Cessna Maintenance program. What are some realistic operating costs and what should he expect when the time comes to part ways with his share? Thank u gentlemen! First of all a Citation III Model 650 is a very different aircraft then a CJ or CJ3 which are Model 525s. An '84 650 is an early SN plane. You can check what the asking price for these are on Controller. How much is he putting in? Such a share is highly illiquid and good chance he can't get out. Fuel burn is around 1500pph for an 800nm 2 hour trip at FL390. That is 224 GPH. Not very efficient compared to modern turbojets that can do that trip in around half the fuel. The Honeywell TFE731-3C-100S engines have a 4,200 TBO. So depending on when they were last OH'd they could be coming up for a very expensive OH. And second run OH's are often more expensive then the first OH due to more parts needing replacement. You can't predict his operating costs until you know more what his deal is. What programs are the plane on at what hourly cost? Are the engines on a fully paid in program? What is the maintenance status of the plane? When was it's last major inspection and what major inspections are coming up? What is the time to OH for all life limited parts? Does he pay for 25% of all maintenance costs? What is the deal for pilots, hangar, insurance? What are his missions and trip lengths? If he is paying $150K - $200K to buy in then he should spend a few thousand and hire someone knowledgeable to review the aircraft logs and maintenance status, advise him on the likely future maintenance expenses, and appraise the aircraft value. Frankly, he will likely do better chartering or buying a Jetcard depending on his missions. If you want the names of some folks then PM me.
_________________ Allen
Last edited on 22 Oct 2015, 15:18, edited 1 time in total.
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a CJ3. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 15:47 |
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Joined: 08/13/14 Posts: 540 Post Likes: +261
Aircraft: Cessna T206H
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Allen thanks for the clarification. It is a Citation III. Haven't received an answer yet regarding the specifics of the program its enrolled in. His share of the engine and mains reserve is $800/hr. He also pays 25% of all associated costs-hangar, ins, crew, etc. which totals approx $2300/mo. I assume he also pays his share of maintenance. It just had a major inspection and the next one is due the first of the year. He has no mission profile.....doesn't travel much for business, and vacations 3-4 times a year. Makes absolutely no financial sense! There's more to the story but I'll leave it at that for now. Thanks again for taking the time to respond!
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a CJ3. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 15:50 |
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Joined: 01/29/08 Posts: 26338 Post Likes: +13085 Location: Walterboro, SC. KRBW
Aircraft: PC12NG
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Username Protected wrote: He has no mission profile.....doesn't travel much for business, and vacations 3-4 times a year. NetJets. Works great.
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a CJ3. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 17:05 |
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Joined: 01/31/09 Posts: 5193 Post Likes: +3038 Location: Northern NJ
Aircraft: SR22;CJ2+;C510
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Username Protected wrote: He has no mission profile.....doesn't travel much for business, and vacations 3-4 times a year. NetJets. Works great.
Marquis Card for under 50 hours a year.
https://www.netjets.com/MarquisJetCard/
_________________ Allen
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a CJ3. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 17:20 |
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Joined: 01/31/09 Posts: 5193 Post Likes: +3038 Location: Northern NJ
Aircraft: SR22;CJ2+;C510
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Username Protected wrote: Allen thanks for the clarification. It is a Citation III. Haven't received an answer yet regarding the specifics of the program its enrolled in. His share of the engine and mains reserve is $800/hr. He also pays 25% of all associated costs-hangar, ins, crew, etc. which totals approx $2300/mo. I assume he also pays his share of maintenance. It just had a major inspection and the next one is due the first of the year. He has no mission profile.....doesn't travel much for business, and vacations 3-4 times a year. Makes absolutely no financial sense! There's more to the story but I'll leave it at that for now. Thanks again for taking the time to respond! So lets use your numbers: Fuel 225 gph x $3.50 = about $800 Engine & Maintenance = $800 $2,300 x 12 = $27,500 / 25 hours flying = $1,100 We are at $2,700/hour plus FBO fees, crew expenses for 2 pilots, etc. without considering the capital costs. It can easily run him over $4,000/hour. Especially when you factor in the capital buy-in he will not get back. I believe a 25 hour Marquis card costs $100,000 or $4,000/hour with no capital costs or obligations. And we haven't spoken about safety. You know anything about the background and training of the pilots? Would you put your family on the plane? Netjets Marquis card flies under Part 135 and has an outstanding safety record. Makes no sense from many angles.
_________________ Allen
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a Citation III. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 18:39 |
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Joined: 08/13/14 Posts: 540 Post Likes: +261
Aircraft: Cessna T206H
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Guys thanks a bunch for the feedback. Funny cause my first response to him was "RUN!" too. He has a business relationship with the other owners so he tends to trust the numbers they're feeding him and while they don't appear to be out of line, he doesn't comprehend the hidden or non-fixed costs. I tell him that when things break it can cost him tens of thousands but the partners counter that they are current and there is no deferred maintenance. Yes, a NetJets card is much more practical. MUCH more! Any other feedback is appreciated.
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a Citation III. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 18:51 |
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Joined: 08/30/13 Posts: 419 Post Likes: +71 Company: Cruce Aircraft Services Location: KPGD
Aircraft: Learjet 55, C-310
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Just wait until the airplane needs a windshield or the other partners want to paint the airplane. I am not sure what it cost on a Citation but for a Lear its 80k per windshield. Jets= deep pockets, old jets= run!!!!
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Post subject: Re: 25% Share of a Citation III. What to look for. Posted: 22 Oct 2015, 20:59 |
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Joined: 01/31/09 Posts: 5193 Post Likes: +3038 Location: Northern NJ
Aircraft: SR22;CJ2+;C510
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Username Protected wrote: ... the partners counter that they are current and there is no deferred maintenance.
The upcoming engine OH is not deferred maintenance so they are telling the truth. The hidden costs are not what is deferred but what is coming up in the next few years. I suspect those partners are happy to bring another deep pocket to contribute 25% of those upcoming expenses.
_________________ Allen
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