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The Unceasing Cessna Hacienda (damninteresting.com)
114 points by ca98am79 on Oct 28, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 29 comments



It's fascinating that the record, if I can understand it correctly, was effectively unbeaten for 5 decades. I guess even with technology and comfort and reliability improvements, nobody else wanted to spend 2 months cooped up in an airplane?


In my opinion this is probably due to cost. Not just how much this would cost today but the personal cost as well.

Aviation is a pretty expensive hobby to get into nowadays. You're looking at $10,000 just to get your private license. This really limits the kind of people that can get into it. And the opportunity cost for those people to take 2-3 months off for a stunt like this is really high. Never mind the time that it would take to prepare for it.

On one hand, you have a lot of folks that get into it as a career, so after their initial investment (mostly folks get money from their parents, some take out loans) you spend a lot of time teaching so you can reach the 1,500 required flight hours to become an airline transport pilot. These kinds of pilots are more interested in starting to earn a living rather than take months off to perform a stunt like this.

On the other, there's a good number of older, wealthier, folks that are near or at retirement age. These kinds of pilots aren't the kinds of folks that would be able to sustain months of endurance flying and living.

Then let's look at the costs. Cessna 172s are still being made so we can compare prices. In 1960 a 172 cost $9,450[1], which is roughly $87,000 adjusted for inflation. A new 172 today will cost you over $430,000! A lot of this price increase has to do with the exorbitant cost of insurance for manufacturers beginning in the 1980s.

Just for fun I also looked at the gas costs, they weren't as high as I initially thought they would be. There's not many great sources besides anecdotes that I found, but aviation gas (avgas) was around .30c / gallon in 1965 [2]. A 172 in cruise will burn around 6 gallons per hour, so in 1965 two months of continuous use nets $2,500 ($23,000 adjusted for inflation). Today avgas is almost $5 / gallon, so that's over $40,000 just in gas costs.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cessna_172#Variants [2] https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/avgas-cost...


No one is buying 172s new except flight schools.

Airplane values drop like rocks.

Used 172s generally go for $60k-$120k... and there are plenty of planes just as capable that go for less...


It's worth pointing out that the 1500 hour ATP minimum is US-only, and only for commercial airlines. You can guy paid non-airline jobs other than teaching (ag pilots, bush pilots, etc.) once you have your commercial (250h min), and if you're in Europe or Asia you can get an airline job at well below 1500.


I don't know a lot about the industry, but being a non-airline commercial pilot sounds like an enjoyable job for an introvert. Like over-the-road trucking, but with a cooler machine.


Way way more dangerous through.

This is the kind of Flying where it’s pretty routine to fly UNDER power lines.

The pay isn’t usually all that great either, and you’re often working out of some remote camp with minimal amenities for long periods.


It depends. Ag and bush stuff can be pretty dangerous. The CFI that I got my PPL from left when he was below ATP mins and was flying PC-12s and M500/M600s around for a place that sold them (no passenger stuff I am aware of). You can do 135 VFR work at 500 TT as well, but IFR reqs are 1200 so most jobs require 1200.

And yeah the pay is dog shit, barely any better than a CFI. I haven't checked the market in a while but if I recall, CFIs that are employees for mom and pop shops are lucky to pull in $20-25/hr when they're flying, and will be half that when they're not. Independent ones can make a lot more but then they typically need to have a plane on top of that which has its own issues.


No faster way to clock up 1500 hours than flying for 63 straight days!


Not a great look when your log book only shows one landing.


And they were a fraction of a second younger than if they’s stayed on the ground, thanks to relativity.


It wasn't a particularly cheap stunt then, but it ended up being worth the publicity. I think a similar stunt now, in a world of highly reliable machines and always-on media, just wouldn't gather enough attention to make the cost worth it. Basically, I think they were on the tail end of people caring about this kind of thing.


>You're looking at $10,000 just to get your private license.

Modern tuition for college is much more expensive than this, and yet people continue to go to college. It doesn't seem to be limit the number of people as you suggest this is the limiting factor on the number of people getting license. A quick internet search shows that learning become a truck driver can also cost close to $10k as well.


As far as I can tell through a few searches, their record of 64 days, 22 hours, and 19 minutes of continuous flying is still unbeaten:

https://disciplesofflight.com/flight-endurance/


Near the end of the article/podcast they say that the group that kept track of the records stopped allowing new entries. So officially no one can break the record.


I believe there were changes to American regulations soon after that made such flights more difficult. I can't find a reference to it, though.


The article/podcast states that this specific record keeping was stopped due to safety.


The hygiene problems alone in two people "living" in a Cessna 172 for that period of time made me cringe. If you've never been in a Cessna 172, imagine two people living in a 1993 Toyota Corolla. It's a little bit smaller than that.


If you are ever on a road trip or in a plane, two items will improve your experience (and Hygiene) by leaps and bounds. A pack of baby wipes, and makeup remover wipes. Being able to wipe the grease from your face and having a clean posterior are key to comfort in small enclosed spaces.

Another thing that helps a lot is foot spray to keep your socks dry.


I did my time in a 99 Corolla, it's doable but gross


This part doesn't make sense: "When he’d first opened Alamo Airways 17 years earlier, George Crockett had deputized his own fiesta-red Ford Thunderbird convertible..."

17 years before 1958 would be 1941. But the first Thunderbird was produced in 1954.


I've seen that plane at McCarran so many times, but I had no idea about the history behind it. Fascinating article!


The related Wikipedia article is nicely organized:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_endurance_record


There’s some memorabilia and artifacts from the flight, including one of the engine valves, at the flight museum in the pre security area at LAS airport.


You can also spot the plane hanging above the baggage claim hall.


But how do you change the engine of a flying airplane?


High altitude and quick hands, I imagine.


Have two engines.


Very carefully.





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