NPPL
Author
Discussion

Ecosseven

Original Poster:

2,181 posts

233 months

Sunday 25th October 2009
quotequote all
In addition to considering going for my NPPL(M) licence I’m also looking at the costs involved in obtaining an NPPL licence with a view to perhaps buying a share in a small two seater ‘spamcan’ such as a Piper Tomahawk or a Cessna 150 / 152. Based on some research on the web it looks like the cost will be around £5k at a minimum for 32 hours flying, although I do appreciate that very few students achieve their licence in the minimum number of hours. Realistically £6 - £6.5K is probably nearer the mark.

Once I qualify I would hope to buy a share in a 2 seat aircraft for no more than £4K and keep the month costs down to around £60-70 and £40-45 / hour wet. This would hopefully mean that I can fly twice a month for around £150 - £160 a month.

What are your thoughts?

All the best.

Martin.

IforB

9,840 posts

245 months

Sunday 25th October 2009
quotequote all
The NPPL is only really useful if you have a medical reason that disqualifies you from holding a class 2 medical.

The training is a little different, but not in any meaningful way and you haven't really got a hope of completing it in 32hrs. Well, you might do it, but I wouldn't ever say that someone with that few hours is anything other than a liability in reality!

However, an NPPL(M)won't allow you to fly spamcans like Cessnas as it is a microlight training course of 25 hours for an unrestricted licence. You will need an NPPL(SSEA) licence.

eharding

14,549 posts

300 months

Sunday 25th October 2009
quotequote all
I suspect that if you have an NPPL(M) then you may well get some training offset against an NPPL(SSEA) - Google LASORS (no, not the frickin' things on frickin' sharks' heads).

I'd argue that whilst a cheap looking share in a Traumahawk or a 150 might look cheap, it is cheap for a reason - because the cash-calls in any group can come up and bite you at any time, and anything on a CofA which involves mandatory involvement of a licensed maintenance organisation will cost you an arm, a leg, a kidney, your liver and an option on your first-born child.

Consider something on the LAA register, which will do any of the UK VFR stuff your Traumahawk/150 can do - probably better, and certainly a lot cheaper. If you decide that you *really* want to indulge in international all-weather IFR touring, you want some seriously capable kit, a JAR PPL; at the very least an IMC, and in reality an IR....neither of which are an option for an NPPL.