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Hitchhiking a plane

275 bytes added, 21:07, 13 September 2008
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Often pilots looking to up their air-miles (for increased certification, etc) will make routine weekly flights to cities several hours off by car. ''Be sure to ask if they're planning on landing!'' Students taking their last flight (called a ''cross country'') before obtaining their license may also be willing to take passengers who can split/help with fuel costs--though technically speaking, this is illegal, it can happen under an "I won't say anything if you won't" agreement. Notices on busy flight school message boards are a good way to make connections for this.
 
Correction:It is not illegal to split the cost of fuel and A/C rental.The rule for Private Pilots say they can not make profit out of their passengers,However student pilots working towards their CPL do many long X-country.and its perfectly normal to split costs with them.
With rising fuel costs, pilots may be much less likely to take passengers: in a small plane, your added weight is significant. Though it's not in the spirit of hitchhiking (or more in the spirit of Romanian hitching), if you're willing to offer to split or help with gasoline costs, your chances may be better. Keep in mind that offering to split costs on a small single-engine plane (like a Cessna 150) will run you about the cost of driving; splitting the costs for larger planes may be comparable to renting a car+gas, or even to flying on a commercial flight.
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