AirwaySim

General forums => General forum => Topic started by: meiru on April 26, 2010, 04:54:35 PM

Title: new vs. used airplanes
Post by: meiru on April 26, 2010, 04:54:35 PM
little question... is there any reason, why I should order (lease) new airplanes over used airplanes? ... let's say an MD-83 or 88 for 360-440k a month vs. a new MD-88 or MD-90-30 er for 580k a month... I can't imagine, that I can save those 140k a month only using a newer airplane... but, maybe I'm overlooking some CI effects? ...
Title: Re: new vs. used airplanes
Post by: swiftus27 on April 26, 2010, 04:57:09 PM
lets start:

1.  Older planes are harder to maintain.  Every check costs more.
2.  There is a smaller impact on your CI when you use old planes.
3.  Older planes usually have longer turnaround times (the MD80-88 series is not one of the groups but the MD90 and B717 are diff groups)
4.  Older planes need more fuel to fly from a to b.
Title: Re: new vs. used airplanes
Post by: alexgv1 on April 26, 2010, 06:16:17 PM
In my experience, the higher leasing costs were always worth paying for newer planes. You might get old planes on a dirt cheap lease (allowing you to buy in bulk) but the heavy maintenance checks will cost so much more.
Title: Re: new vs. used airplanes
Post by: MattDell on April 26, 2010, 08:27:52 PM
Look at the maintenance costs on a 20 y/o plane vs. a brand new one.  It'll make sense immediately. ;)
Title: Re: new vs. used airplanes
Post by: meiru on April 26, 2010, 10:27:36 PM
Well, that's what I did and... replacing MD-80s between 5 and 12 years old with MD-90s doesn't seem to be a good idea... :-) so for now I continue leasing used MD-80s ...
Title: Re: new vs. used airplanes
Post by: alexgv1 on April 27, 2010, 11:35:24 AM
Well aircraft with age under 10 years shouldn't give you too much trouble. Seems feasible to me. Problems only start when they're 15+ yrs old in terms of costs. If you keep your fleet age in single figures even with used aircraft you will eventually be able to replace them with new/newer ones as the leases expire.