29 May 2025, 11:26 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 00:50 |
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Joined: 03/09/13 Posts: 925 Post Likes: +467 Location: Byron Bay,NSW Australia
Aircraft: C525,C25A,C25C,CL604
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Username Protected wrote: When my business really needed money, banks wouldn’t talk to us, because we didn’t have any significant revenue or backlog. When we had revenue and backlog, we didn’t need banks. its a huge gap in the financial landscape for startup technology businesses. My grandad taught me young that the banks will lend you an umbrella and take it off you on a rainy day. Over my 30 years of business ownership he was proved correct. Andrew
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 07:58 |
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Joined: 03/04/13 Posts: 2726 Post Likes: +1354 Location: Little Rock, Ar
Aircraft: A36 C560 C551 C560XL
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Banks are with you win or draw.
Robert T
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 08:29 |
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Joined: 02/27/23 Posts: 10 Post Likes: +9
Aircraft: Looking for the next
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Username Protected wrote: My company is Derex Inc. Everything I design and build is clean sheet, built by drillers for drillers. Neat. In 2013, I had 32 wells drilled for my geothermal field. 2 miles of drilling, 4 miles of pipe, all underneath my future building built on top of the field after it was done. The drill rig cut through rock like it was butter, doing about 1 or 2 feet per minute. I was amazed. Cost, with pipe insertion and grouting (but not the pipe itself) was $52,800 back then, basically $5 per foot. Works fabulously. No leaks. I heat and cool my 35,000 SF building for $250/month. Mike C.
Geothermal/ Ground Source Heat Pumps actually work to save money for both heating and cooling.
Most people don’t like to spend the money upfront but it returns quickly on large buildings with large but consistent heating and cooling loads.
One of the drills I made is in Colorado and he can drill 300’ in under an hour….
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 09:30 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20198 Post Likes: +25328 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: Geothermal/ Ground Source Heat Pumps actually work to save money for both heating and cooling. Absolutely, best type of HVAC there is. Quote: Most people don’t like to spend the money upfront It turned out to be cheaper for my new construction building when you factor all true costs. For example, none of our units have resistive backup heat. To add that would have required a larger utility feed, bigger transformer, bigger electrical panels, much more copper. Air to air units would require resistive backup since they perform so poorly in cold temperatures. I also put in smaller units that air to air would have been. I have 42 tons (900 SF per ton), architect said the normal rule of thumb is 90 tons (400 SF per ton). My units are two speed and I don't think they have ever used the second speed in 11 years. Quote: but it returns quickly on large buildings with large but consistent heating and cooling loads. I was positive from day one. Now I don't have to worry about replacing outdoor units, copper theft, etc. Quote: One of the drills I made is in Colorado and he can drill 300’ in under an hour…. That's amazing. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 09:52 |
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Joined: 07/21/08 Posts: 5755 Post Likes: +7141 Location: Decatur, TX (XA99)
Aircraft: 1979 Bonanza A36
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Username Protected wrote: So cool to hear a positive firsthand experience of geo therm climate control.
I have a property I have been considering converting to solar, but this idea seems more interesting.
Where can I learn more? Call me. I put geothermal in our house when we built it 18 years ago.
_________________ I'm just here for the free snacks
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 10:40 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20198 Post Likes: +25328 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: I have a property I have been considering converting to solar, but this idea seems more interesting. Direct thermal solar? Not a good idea. PV solar? A fantastic idea. I recently did PV solar on my mother's house in FL (as in, we did the work, no contractor). It's working well. 12KW array, she is 2400 KWH positive on her net metering balance this year so far. PV solar plus GSHP? An awesome combination. If you want to know more about PV solar, I can help. What location will determine a lot, such as your net metering rules, code standards, and solar profile. Mike C.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 14:12 |
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Joined: 05/01/12 Posts: 1150 Post Likes: +750 Location: Smith Mountain Lake VA W91
Aircraft: Ex 58P
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Username Protected wrote: So cool to hear a positive firsthand experience of geo therm climate control.
I have a property I have been considering converting to solar, but this idea seems more interesting.
Where can I learn more? Call me. I put geothermal in our house when we built it 18 years ago. My home’s geothermal went in 13 years ago. Three vertical 345’ deep wells with one liquid loop traversing all three wells and all three “water furnaces”. The units are a 4 ton, 3 and a 2. Each can run at either about 60% or at full rated capacity. I turned the resistance heat off shortly after it was installed. (If you move the thermostat more than 2 degrees it wants to turn on the aux heat.) Not needed, even down to -10. Also all systems rarely run at full power. The loop temperature is measured during service twice a year. Nominally, it is 48 degrees. Been as high as 70 once at the end of the summer and in the low 40’s at the end of a winter. Usually it is within a few degrees of 48.
Nonetheless I don’t think that the financial case is super attractive. Payback for me is still decades from now.
The 2 ton unit also it configured to have three zones. Each bedroom gets its own temperature control.
I like the quality of the heat and the quietness both inside and out. I would never go back. It is also the case that all three could be running at full capacity on the standby generator.
Air to air heat exchange, or resistance seem to be very 20th century; oil, gas fired or coal 19th century; and wood Middle Ages.
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 17:20 |
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Joined: 12/03/14 Posts: 20198 Post Likes: +25328 Company: Ciholas, Inc Location: KEHR
Aircraft: C560V
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Username Protected wrote: PV solar works well in sunny Southern Arizona, but it's still quite expensive and the local utility has managed to pretty much gut the net metering benefits. With a battery, you can basically manage your system without having net metering. You charge during the day, run battery at night, AZ daily load profile works well since you have solar during the hot part of the day. A fair number of folks are going totally off grid, no utility connection at all. Solar and battery does 98% of their needs, a generator for those few days that don't. With DIY install, the costs can be a lot cheaper. The solar industry is full of scammers and overpriced installers. The system on my parent's house was $26K, all costs, with 12 KW array, 28 KWH battery, 12 KW inverter. Her electric bill went from $350 month to $27 (minimum charge). Payback period 6.7 years. Electric rates are jumping all over the place as AI and crypto turn us into the Matrix scenario. We turned it on late Nov 2024, can you tell from the utility report? Attachment: solar-turn-on-1.png The primary reason we did it was for power outages during hurricanes. My father can't leave the house, so their only choice is to stay. But they lose power (like they did for Milton, the eye went right over the house). With the solar and battery, they have power all the time. They can't handle a generator, noise, fuel, maintenance, cost. The solar just works without any effort. The money savings was just gravy. Panels are unbelievably cheap. Here is 30 panels of 395 watts for $2252: https://signaturesolar.com/talesun-395w ... 30-panels/That's 11.85 KW array, only $75 per panel. I find that amazing. Need inverter, battery, wiring, mounting, etc, to make a full system, but it is still pretty inexpensive to do. Mike C.
Please login or Register for a free account via the link in the red bar above to download files.
_________________ Email mikec (at) ciholas.com
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: 27 May 2025, 19:26 |
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Joined: 09/20/14 Posts: 2035 Post Likes: +1617 Location: KBJC, KMCW, KVGT
Aircraft: G36TN, Great Lakes
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Username Protected wrote: The solar industry is full of scammers and overpriced installers.
I just shook my head in disbelief as the Tesla installers put up a full roof of panels on a house, directly under a full canopy of oak trees. At least they put them on the South side of the house... I was visiting the neighborhood but almost went to the door to "advise" the homeowners anyway. The real question... where will this thread lead next...?
_________________ Matt Beckner
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: Yesterday, 10:21 |
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Joined: 08/24/15 Posts: 159 Post Likes: +119
Aircraft: C35
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Username Protected wrote: PV solar works well in sunny Southern Arizona, but it's still quite expensive and the local utility has managed to pretty much gut the net metering benefits. With a battery, you can basically manage your system without having net metering. You charge during the day, run battery at night, AZ daily load profile works well since you have solar during the hot part of the day. A fair number of folks are going totally off grid, no utility connection at all. Solar and battery does 98% of their needs, a generator for those few days that don't. With DIY install, the costs can be a lot cheaper. The solar industry is full of scammers and overpriced installers. The system on my parent's house was $26K, all costs, with 12 KW array, 28 KWH battery, 12 KW inverter. Her electric bill went from $350 month to $27 (minimum charge). Payback period 6.7 years. Electric rates are jumping all over the place as AI and crypto turn us into the Matrix scenario. We turned it on late Nov 2024, can you tell from the utility report? Attachment: solar-turn-on-1.png The primary reason we did it was for power outages during hurricanes. My father can't leave the house, so their only choice is to stay. But they lose power (like they did for Milton, the eye went right over the house). With the solar and battery, they have power all the time. They can't handle a generator, noise, fuel, maintenance, cost. The solar just works without any effort. The money savings was just gravy. Panels are unbelievably cheap. Here is 30 panels of 395 watts for $2252: https://signaturesolar.com/talesun-395w ... 30-panels/That's 11.85 KW array, only $75 per panel. I find that amazing. Need inverter, battery, wiring, mounting, etc, to make a full system, but it is still pretty inexpensive to do. Mike C.
Selfishly, I would love to see you do a CSO Beech style write up of that install with part numbers/etc. We'll put PV solar on our next home and the quotes I hear friends are getting are astronomical.
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Post subject: Re: Aircraft inventory levels are critically low. Posted: Yesterday, 18:57 |
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Joined: 11/07/11 Posts: 812 Post Likes: +463 Location: KBED, KCRE
Aircraft: Phenom 100
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Username Protected wrote: Selfishly, I would love to see you do a CSO Beech style write up of that install with part numbers/etc. Ditto, especially the battery bank and any insurance issues with it. We have a 20KW solar system at our house in South Carolina and it's ROI was just over 5 years. Now it's just pocketing money, it's great, but I don't think the town would have let us do the electrical work ourselves. Chip-
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