• dustyData@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    No matter how expensive a home sim you make, it won’t ever get be even a quarter of what an actual entry amateur plane costs to buy and maintain. It’s not even the plane itself either, it’s all the recurring costs like storage, maintenance, spare parts, fuel, certification fees, taxes, etc. The only cheap flight option for a recreational pilot is bushcraft light planes. And they will still cost more than the sim setup, while you’ll only be able to fly it on certain places, during certain weather, at certain times of the year. The rest of the time you’ll still have to pay all the storage and maintenance fees. Planes are incredibly expensive.

    • Coasting0942@reddthat.com
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      8 months ago

      Yeah, you’ll be able to actually use it when life allows you, vs restructuring your whole life around being able to fly.

      Now we just need one for where millionaires think their work is saving the world. Apparently the city building sims aren’t sufficient.

      • psud@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        There’s heights and there heights. The common fear is of heights that are large enough for a fall to cause serious injury, and not too large to be out of range for biological fall protection

        I used to be afraid of heights, but trained myself out of it as an adult. I had trouble abseiling, walking on elevated walkways, standing near windows in tall buildings

        Three things I never had a height problem with:

        • Front seat of a plane (or any other seat, for that matter)
        • Basket of a balloon
        • On top of a tall hill
      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        I have some fear of heights and for some reason it doesn’t get triggered when flying on a plane, even on a prop-plane a km or two above the ground.

        High up in tall buildings or mountain or coastal cliffs, sure, planes, not at all.

        It’s not exactly rational.

        If you’re not actually afraid of flying when on a commercial flight, I bet you won’t either when at the commands of a poky prop-plane.

    • cm0002@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I looked into getting a pilots license and a plane once thinking maybe it would be more fun than flying commercial.

      The license to fly just a dinky Cessna would be expensive af and I would only be able to afford a Cessna from 1982 or some shit anyway AND they only have a range of like 300 miles or some shit.

      To actually go anywhere beyond my state I’d need a private jet license which is even more expensive takes a while and WAY outside of affordability.

      Ah well guess I’m stuck driving or flying commercial

      • dustyData@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Wet lease? Yeah, clubs and leasing are an accessible option but depends on what you want to do. Flying a tiny 182 Cessna, sure will be as much as a nice Sim setup. For one flight, at $200 an hour, roughly 25 hours of flight or thereabouts and you’re already over the price of the simulator.

        Fly commercial jets, like the one this picture is simulating? No way. A small Citation jet starts at $50k a month. That’s probably already 5 times the cost of equipment in that photo. And you can fly the big birds and do crazy stuff with them in the sim.

    • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Indeed.

      Back when I was making extra good money I got some flying lessons and started dreaming about it and eventually figured out the costs (bad enough the upfront ones, way worse the running costs) for a shitty-shit plane that wasn’t even exciting to fly.

      Also the physical setup in the picture looks like it’s emulating large commercial passenger planes (don’t really know enough to guess which, though) and those planes cost millions of dollars.