31 Oct 2024, 19:58 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 06:07 |
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Joined: 02/13/10 Posts: 20229 Post Likes: +24037 Location: Castle Rock, Colorado
Aircraft: Prior C310,BE33,SR22
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To those watching Mooney’s sales numbers over the first half of this year, the shutdown is probably not a huge surprise. According to GAMA sales records, Mooney sold two Acclaim Ultras in each of the first two quarters, after selling 14 aircraft at a value of $10.7 million in 2018. For context, Cirrus sold 203 aircraft in the first half of 2019, while Mooney’s output trailed Extra, Pipistrel and Quest. https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/moo ... 13%2C+2019
_________________ Arlen Get your motor runnin' Head out on the highway - Mars Bonfire
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 08:34 |
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Joined: 03/01/14 Posts: 2244 Post Likes: +1833 Location: 0TX0 Granbury TX
Aircraft: T-210M Aeronca 7AC
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I’ve always had a soft spot for one of these.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 08:41 |
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Joined: 12/30/15 Posts: 720 Post Likes: +751 Location: NH; KLEB
Aircraft: M2, erstwhile G58
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Username Protected wrote: To those watching Mooney’s sales numbers over the first half of this year, the shutdown is probably not a huge surprise. According to GAMA sales records, Mooney sold two Acclaim Ultras in each of the first two quarters, after selling 14 aircraft at a value of $10.7 million in 2018. For context, Cirrus sold 203 aircraft in the first half of 2019, while Mooney’s output trailed Extra, Pipistrel and Quest. https://www.avweb.com/aviation-news/moo ... 13%2C+2019 How long until Bo & Baron go the same way? I understand that they are within a larger company, but unit sales are still anemic. 3 and 4 respectively for first 6 mos of 2019. Meanwhile Cirrus marches on .... 172 single engine piston units, 36% of worldwide piston single sales. Also Piper outsold Cessna/Beech. Piper 77 units, Textron 73 units. In the twin market, Diamond outsold Beech 15:1; 60 units vs 4.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 08:47 |
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Joined: 01/27/18 Posts: 1660 Post Likes: +1518 Location: South NorthEast West Virginia :)
Aircraft: Club Archer
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Username Protected wrote: Wow, 319 employees producing 7 planes a year... This is the problem. That means each plane has to carry 40+ salaries. A jet couldn’t do that. How many people would it take to produce 7 RVs a year if it was their full time job? Maybe 10. That’s really poor management there. I thought they still made parts for previous models, plus possibly had some side component work. Still, 300+ staff is a lot to cover.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 12:16 |
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Joined: 11/20/14 Posts: 6584 Post Likes: +4691
Aircraft: V35
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Username Protected wrote: I’ve always had a soft spot for one of these. Yes, the Mooney Mite is the most fun looking toy airplane. It's not aerobatic, though... if you do a loop you'd better have a parachute handy as you will be in the center of a debris cloud of nails and plywood I spent some time on the Mite site a few years ago, since it's a wooden plane they are getting long in the tooth and many need a type of restoration that is prohibitively expensive. Good, turnkey Mites are tough to find based on what I saw on the site. Here is a great pirep from Budd Davisson on the Mite: http://www.airbum.com/pireps/PirepMooneyMite.html Realistically, the pilot who wants to strap on a small, responsive airplane today will buy an RV that someone else already built. It will be newer and easier to fix than a Mite, and aerobatic.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 13:34 |
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Joined: 06/02/10 Posts: 7438 Post Likes: +4726 Company: Inscrutable Fasteners, LLC Location: West Palm Beach - F45
Aircraft: Planeless
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Username Protected wrote: I’ve always had a soft spot for one of these. Yes, the Mooney Mite is the most fun looking toy airplane. It's not aerobatic, though... if you do a loop you'd better have a parachute handy as you will be in the center of a debris cloud of nails and plywood
Saw one at OSH that the owner had flown it all the way from San Francisco.
That's dedication to the cause right there.
Best, Rich
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 15:36 |
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Joined: 02/05/14 Posts: 1293 Post Likes: +939 Company: Aromech Inc Location: West Michigan
Aircraft: V35B, ERCO-415
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Username Protected wrote: Had not thought of that angle, interesting. Didnt it make up 1/4 of the Mooney fleet built in 2019?
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 19:39 |
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Joined: 02/25/16 Posts: 287 Post Likes: +170 Location: Tupelo, MS
Aircraft: 182R
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All you need to know Attachment: mooney.png Attachment: cirrus.png
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 13 Nov 2019, 22:58 |
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Joined: 09/25/08 Posts: 469 Post Likes: +514
Aircraft: 700P, F35, D17
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I have owned a lot of planes but the Mooney was one of my favorites. For those of you that need a parachute to buy an airplane don't fly in the Staggerwing, the Aerostar or the Bonanza because nothing in my fleet is going to save those that can't figure out how to glide an airplane. Pull the parachute and you are totaled. Glide to a landing maybe not. I hope Mooney figures it out.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 14 Nov 2019, 00:14 |
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Joined: 10/24/15 Posts: 488 Post Likes: +369 Location: NW burb of Chi-Town
Aircraft: Cherokee 180F/ A36
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Chinese owned Mooney is done. Continental is also Chinese owned. Its really a shame. There are people that could have made it work that were ignored on the Continental side that would/could have flowed to the Mooney side of things. CEO of Continental has now "retired"??? There is much more to the story that I will not air out here..... Here is what I can put out there: https://www.avweb.com/recent-updates/bu ... etirement/MFer Got lost and things went bad: https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct- ... story.htmlThe Chinese are shrewd business people. More heads will roll as directed from the motherland....
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 14 Nov 2019, 12:03 |
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Joined: 06/28/14 Posts: 1015 Post Likes: +731 Location: Pleasanton , TX (KPEZ)
Aircraft: 1963 Bonanza P35
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Username Protected wrote: I have owned a lot of planes but the Mooney was one of my favorites. For those of you that need a parachute to buy an airplane don't fly in the Staggerwing, the Aerostar or the Bonanza because nothing in my fleet is going to save those that can't figure out how to glide an airplane. Pull the parachute and you are totaled. Glide to a landing maybe not. I hope Mooney figures it out. Eric I am sorry and do not mean to offend but the argument for or against the chute is over. It's not a matter of who can fly and who can't, or if you "need" a chute you are not a real pilot etc. The facts are in, the market has spoken. If you are going to build a single engine airplane in the world today it better have a chute. If not you are at a disadvantage in the marketplace the day you enter it. Its not who "needs" a chute and who doesn't anymore. At this point it just is what it is. Cirrus changed the market, they fundamentally changed it forever. Those who keep refusing to understand this will never compete with those who do. Those companies that refuse to recognize this extremely obvious fact will probably not survive as a company either.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 14 Nov 2019, 12:55 |
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Joined: 05/27/16 Posts: 904 Post Likes: +579 Location: KAPA - Denver
Aircraft: 1983 Bonanza A36TN
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Username Protected wrote: Eric I am sorry and do not mean to offend but the argument for or against the chute is over. It's not a matter of who can fly and who can't, or if you "need" a chute you are not a real pilot etc. The facts are in, the market has spoken. If you are going to build a single engine airplane in the world today it better have a chute. If not you are at a disadvantage in the marketplace the day you enter it. Its not who "needs" a chute and who doesn't anymore. At this point it just is what it is. Cirrus changed the market, they fundamentally changed it forever. Those who keep refusing to understand this will never compete with those who do. Those companies that refuse to recognize this extremely obvious fact will probably not survive as a company either. It's not about need. Clear day over hospitable terrain? Sure, I'll glide the plane into a field. Probably put it down level and upright. Night? Low ceiling undercast? Mountains, rocks, forest? Less confidence in my chances if I can't see the flat, clear bit or if there isn't one. Who cares if it totals the airplane? As soon as the big fan stops, the insurance company owns the plane, your only duty is to the people inside. I love my Bonanza but I'm looking really hard at twins for the same reason some people want a 'chute.
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Post subject: Re: Rumor That All Mooney Employees Furloughed For A Week Posted: 14 Nov 2019, 17:26 |
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Joined: 06/28/14 Posts: 1015 Post Likes: +731 Location: Pleasanton , TX (KPEZ)
Aircraft: 1963 Bonanza P35
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Username Protected wrote: Eric I am sorry and do not mean to offend but the argument for or against the chute is over. It's not a matter of who can fly and who can't, or if you "need" a chute you are not a real pilot etc. The facts are in, the market has spoken. If you are going to build a single engine airplane in the world today it better have a chute. If not you are at a disadvantage in the marketplace the day you enter it. Its not who "needs" a chute and who doesn't anymore. At this point it just is what it is. Cirrus changed the market, they fundamentally changed it forever. Those who keep refusing to understand this will never compete with those who do. Those companies that refuse to recognize this extremely obvious fact will probably not survive as a company either. It's not about need. Clear day over hospitable terrain? Sure, I'll glide the plane into a field. Probably put it down level and upright. Night? Low ceiling undercast? Mountains, rocks, forest? Less confidence in my chances if I can't see the flat, clear bit or if there isn't one. Who cares if it totals the airplane? As soon as the big fan stops, the insurance company owns the plane, your only duty is to the people inside. I love my Bonanza but I'm looking really hard at twins for the same reason some people want a 'chute.
Dean I am with you 100%. I have looked at twins as an option myself. However unless you need the extra seats or payload going the route of a twin does not make sense for everyone. More training needed to stay proficient, more money needed to keep it flying (annuals etc), more money needed to make it fly (fuel etc) double the things to go wrong and break in flight or otherwise. For me if it is strictly an issue of having another option when things go wrong I would take the single with a chute over a twin. But most of my flying is just me solo. I don't need the seats or payload. So for me if it's just a decision based on safety the chute satisfies that itch for my mission.
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