06 Jun 2025, 06:28 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 17:30 |
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Joined: 05/23/13 Posts: 8000 Post Likes: +10319 Company: Jet Acquisitions Location: Franklin, TN 615-739-9091 chip@jetacq.com
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Username Protected wrote: Some of these figures ($$$) are hard for me to wrap my head around. Just amazing how expensive it is. Yes, there's a lot of sticker shock these days! We see buyers over paying for aircraft that are close to engine events because they are ignorant of the actual cost.
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 21:11 |
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Joined: 12/24/18 Posts: 611 Post Likes: +693 Location: KHFD
Aircraft: F33A
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Username Protected wrote: How much of Pratt's overhead is because of liability?
If a Pratt powered airplane crashes, they get sued.
I'm not defending them, just pointing out that they have a cost of doing business that goes far beyond the cost to produce the components they sell. Here’s another data point. While working as a designer for a business jet/turboprop/APU manufacturer (ok, Garrett), I would be faced with the liability questions routinely. A friend worked in the product liability group and told me the following: Any time anything happened to an airplane, from the most trivial to catastrophic, the company would be named in a lawsuit. The gamut ranged from ramp rashes to fatal crashes.
90-95% of these lawsuits could be dismissed within a short time by demonstrating the engine had no causal contribution to the incident/accident
Of the remaining lawsuits 80-85% would be dismissed by discovery
The small percentage left would be settled with a financial agreement
Very few lawsuits ever reached a courtroom
However, the cost of answering these lawsuits (attorneys, engineering reviews, quality records gathered, etc) averaged $50,000/incident (mid 1980s dollars) and Garrett was seeing close to a thousand filings a year
You do the math
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 21:25 |
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Joined: 12/24/18 Posts: 611 Post Likes: +693 Location: KHFD
Aircraft: F33A
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Username Protected wrote: For those that feel for the OEM’s, don’t forget that many of these engines were designed through government projects. If nothing else, many of the core modules of those engines were tested in early cruise missle/drone technologies. They are typically cost plus contracts. Williams International comes to mind. Much of the P&W JT8D technology came out of J75/J79 programs. Mostly true. Pratt, GE, Lycoming, and Allison were significantly subsidized by the US Government for various military programs and leveraged their military cores into commercial applications. For example, PW J75 > JT8, Lycoming T55 > LF502, GE TF34 > CF34. Williams was a special case, having already internally funded development of the FJ44 when the DoD scooped it up for the cruise missile (I was working on a project in college with the cross-section and performance manual when it suddenly was classified - requiring me to return all the documentation in my possession - and leaving my project in ruins  ) Garrett developed the TPE331 and TFE731 families internally, but got some return via tax dollars on the OV-10 and C-21A programs.
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 21:26 |
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Joined: 09/17/10 Posts: 51 Post Likes: +24 Location: Atlanta, GA
Aircraft: Piper Cheyenne I
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Being new to the PT6 world, this is an eye opening thread. I believe(d) that most of the value in my 44 year old, new to me twin turboprop is in the engines. 55 fight hours in and they seem to be doing well. They are just a few hours over 500 hours since overhaul. I suppose time will tell.
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 21:37 |
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Joined: 08/16/15 Posts: 3413 Post Likes: +4908 Location: Ogden UT
Aircraft: Piper M600
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Username Protected wrote: 1.1 MM overhaul cost for a -67 is absolutely nuts. Was this a first run engine? If so, why would they throw their money away? I very much doubt they will see a 1.1 million increase in value on the airplane. Not to mention the lost capital earnings.
PT-6 engines run a hrlluva lot longer than that if monitored and HOTs done every 1800 hours. Yes, it was first run. So far we are not seeing many late model PC-12's ran past TBO.
I have heard that Pilatus SC’s are relatively inflexible signing off planes that don’t conform to the letter of the book. So if you want to have Pilatus support and get parts, can’t cut corners.
_________________ Chuck Ivester Piper M600 Ogden UT
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhaulspp Posted: 21 May 2025, 21:41 |
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Joined: 05/23/13 Posts: 8000 Post Likes: +10319 Company: Jet Acquisitions Location: Franklin, TN 615-739-9091 chip@jetacq.com
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Username Protected wrote: How much of Pratt's overhead is because of liability?
If a Pratt powered airplane crashes, they get sued.
I'm not defending them, just pointing out that they have a cost of doing business that goes far beyond the cost to produce the components they sell. Here’s another data point. While working as a designer for a business jet/turboprop/APU manufacturer (ok, Garrett), I would be faced with the liability questions routinely. A friend worked in the product liability group and told me the following: Any time anything happened to an airplane, from the most trivial to catastrophic, the company would be named in a lawsuit. The gamut ranged from ramp rashes to fatal crashes.
90-95% of these lawsuits could be dismissed within a short time by demonstrating the engine had no causal contribution to the incident/accident
Of the remaining lawsuits 80-85% would be dismissed by discovery
The small percentage left would be settled with a financial agreement
Very few lawsuits ever reached a courtroom
However, the cost of answering these lawsuits (attorneys, engineering reviews, quality records gathered, etc) averaged $50,000/incident (mid 1980s dollars) and Garrett was seeing close to a thousand filings a year
You do the math
I try to explain the cost of liability to people in this industry and they just don’t get it.
If I help someone buy an airplane and they crash it, I will likely get sued. I will have zero liability and won’t pay a dime to the Plaintiff… BUT, I will pay $50k -$100k to an attorney and have my world turned upside down for a year.
You want me to do a hot section? You couldn’t possibly afford it!!
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 22:09 |
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Joined: 01/22/19 Posts: 1098 Post Likes: +855 Location: KPMP
Aircraft: PA23-250
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I looked up some older numbers from 2004.
A PT6-135 hot section ran between $17k, best case, and $45k, worst case. An overhaul was $150k, and a brand-new engine was $276k.
_________________ A&P/IA/CFI/avionics tech KPMP Cirrus aircraft expert
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 22:21 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20266 Post Likes: +25399 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: Get your engines overhauled by a shop that later gets a bad reputation and you'll wish you had written that check to Standard Aero. You get your clients to spend a lot of money using fear. Buy more expensive airplanes, put them on expensive programs, use expensive shops. I remain convinced all the extra money you spend on "preserving" value isn't dollar for dollar. You'll be lucky to get 50 cents on every dollar back doing this. It is easy to spend a lot of money in aviation, it is a lot harder to get a lot of value in aviation. The engine shop makes a lot of difference and it isn't just labor rates. It is mostly about flexibility in addressing things. An independent shop may allow you not to have to do some expensive SB, whereas a DOF will force it, for example. A DOF won't let you use blade regrowth options, or used parts, or anything else like that. What DOF really means is "we lack flexibility because we do it the way Pratt wants us to". Pratt has marketed it as a feature, but it really is all about taking options away from the customer and forcing an expensive overhaul. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 21 May 2025, 23:58 |
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Joined: 05/23/13 Posts: 8000 Post Likes: +10319 Company: Jet Acquisitions Location: Franklin, TN 615-739-9091 chip@jetacq.com
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Username Protected wrote: Get your engines overhauled by a shop that later gets a bad reputation and you'll wish you had written that check to Standard Aero. You get your clients to spend a lot of money using fear. Buy more expensive airplanes, put them on expensive programs, use expensive shops. I remain convinced all the extra money you spend on "preserving" value isn't dollar for dollar. You'll be lucky to get 50 cents on every dollar back doing this. It is easy to spend a lot of money in aviation, it is a lot harder to get a lot of value in aviation. The engine shop makes a lot of difference and it isn't just labor rates. It is mostly about flexibility in addressing things. An independent shop may allow you not to have to do some expensive SB, whereas a DOF will force it, for example. A DOF won't let you use blade regrowth options, or used parts, or anything else like that. What DOF really means is "we lack flexibility because we do it the way Pratt wants us to". Pratt has marketed it as a feature, but it really is all about taking options away from the customer and forcing an expensive overhaul. Mike C.
Ah it must be nice to have not yet been burned.
There will be a point in the future when the music stops and there’s no seat for you.
When that happens, you’ll think of me and that I warned you.
Until then, you are smarter than me.
Can you explain how someone who charges a flat fee benefits when their clients spend more money?
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 22 May 2025, 07:17 |
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Joined: 11/30/12 Posts: 4849 Post Likes: +5477 Location: Santa Fe, NM (KSAF)
Aircraft: B200, 500B
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Username Protected wrote: An independent shop may allow you not to have to do some expensive SB Mike C. It really boils down to “I save money by skipping manufacturer recommended maintenance.” That’s it. That’s the whole secret of cheap jets. Is it smart? Check back in 20 years for the answer!
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 22 May 2025, 07:23 |
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Joined: 03/04/13 Posts: 2730 Post Likes: +1359 Location: Little Rock, Ar
Aircraft: A36 C560 C551 C560XL
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Username Protected wrote: Get your engines overhauled by a shop that later gets a bad reputation and you'll wish you had written that check to Standard Aero. You get your clients to spend a lot of money using fear. Buy more expensive airplanes, put them on expensive programs, use expensive shops. I remain convinced all the extra money you spend on "preserving" value isn't dollar for dollar. You'll be lucky to get 50 cents on every dollar back doing this. It is easy to spend a lot of money in aviation, it is a lot harder to get a lot of value in aviation. The engine shop makes a lot of difference and it isn't just labor rates. It is mostly about flexibility in addressing things. An independent shop may allow you not to have to do some expensive SB, whereas a DOF will force it, for example. A DOF won't let you use blade regrowth options, or used parts, or anything else like that. What DOF really means is "we lack flexibility because we do it the way Pratt wants us to". Pratt has marketed it as a feature, but it really is all about taking options away from the customer and forcing an expensive overhaul. Mike C.
Not in my experience. Standard Aero proposed and used several used parts in my overhauls.
Robert T
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Post subject: Re: The Cost of Pratt & Whitney Overhauls Posted: 22 May 2025, 08:32 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20266 Post Likes: +25399 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: Can you explain how someone who charges a flat fee benefits when their clients spend more money? The more money the client spends on the shop, programs, etc, the more the blame falls on the shop, program, etc and not the consultant when things don't go right. It doesn't take a lot of insight to simply recommend the expensive path. To find a more economical path requires more care and knowledge. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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