mustangdriver wrote:
Good for them BDK, but I feel that is above and beyond. When we flew the C-123 To Geneseo, I think we had to buy all of our tickets. When I take my Charger to a car show, I don't get free stuff to take it there. It's my personal toy. I am getting the enjoyment out of people seeing it, and me driving it. Oshkosh is fun, a vacation, a time to get out and be around people that all love the same thing. It's the atmosphere of the world's greatest aviation celebration. If that isn't worth $20.00 a day to you, then you shouldn't be there.
Feel? What are you a Democrat?
This is a simple proposition. Just consider the warbird owner as a seller of services and the airshow as the buyer.
As a warbird owner I have expenses- fuel, insurance, my time, wear and tear/maintenance, etc.
As the airshow, I want you to show up in your fancy plane. I can offer fuel, tickets, the comeraderie between aviators, judging competitions, free ice cream, and all manner of things.
Oshkosh doesn't seem to do much negotiation. I guess they have their way of doing things and you as the aircraft operator can take it or leave it. Other shows may be willing to pay a premium if your aircraft fits within a theme that they want to promote.
A few admission tickets costs the EAA what- a few dollars in actual cost? How much service does EAA actually provide for each ticket? I would think that the infrastructure costs per ticket are minimal considering the number of people that go there. Eric's 5 passengers more than likely make up for the expenses of their tickets just in concession fees and in exchange EAA gets a cool aircraft on the line. Apparently they are not interested. That's fine, but I too am not interested in going because of all the airplanes that didn't go there. I
feel that what Eric was requesting was entirely reasonable.
P.S. This is all meant to be good natured discussion and we can happily agree to disagree.