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well, your right, although in a perfect scenario there is alot of money to be made, that won't happen until the first multi-level tunnel is built which allows for double the profit with virtually the same overhead as a single flight area.. Houston will be the first in the world to have one of those.
So that means that those tunnels should be able to beat the price on any single flight area tunnel. That should help make it affordable for everyone!
Paulipod 0
Nothing final, but certainly a realistic option for us.

Bodyflight Bedford
www.bodyflight.co.uk
I have faith in the ethics of your operation... I know that you will maximize flyer benefit at every opportunity!
We have considered many ways to SPLIT a large diameter single flight area... it is possible with little modifications...
my .02
Robert
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
Canuck 0
I still think tunnel time is overpriced. For an hour in the tunnel, I can do 35-40 jumps. And yes, I know there is more freefall time in an hour in a tunnel than in 35-40 skydives, but how many swoops do I get out of the deal?
As to the question how cheap would it need to be for me to think it's not overpriced - about half of what it is.
For the person that said they invested in a tunnel not to make money, but to see happy faces, might I suggest that you go do some volunteer reading at a daycare or help an elderly person across the street.
Canuck
Paulipod 0
QuoteI still think tunnel time is overpriced. For an hour in the tunnel, I can do 35-40 jumps. And yes, I know there is more freefall time in an hour in a tunnel than in 35-40 skydives, but how many swoops do I get out of the deal?
The numbers are about right if you do everything solo in the tunnel.... but the maths works the other way if you do 2-3-or 4 way....
On a plane the costs go up... in the tunnel your costs go down.
You dont get any swoops, but you wouldnt go in a tunnel if thats what your looking for

Bodyflight Bedford
www.bodyflight.co.uk
QuoteI still think tunnel time is overpriced. For an hour in the tunnel, I can do 35-40 jumps. And yes, I know there is more freefall time in an hour in a tunnel than in 35-40 skydives, but how many swoops do I get out of the deal?
The price of 60 minutes being about equal to the cost of 35-40 skydives is only one advantage of using the tunnel to train.
It it pretty reasonable to do an hour of tunnel time in a single day, two hours if you are used to being in there a lot. If you split up the time so you do only 15-20 minutes out of each 1 hour session and take breaks between sessions (like a tunnel camp) you can end up flying a lot in a day and be making progress the whole time.
Let's say you do 30 minutes of tunnel time in one day - I have a feeling that most people would get a lot more out of this than trying to do 30 skydives in one day. Not only is the cost per minute less, but you can do a lot more of it and still have it be beneficial.
There are a lot more benefits to the tunnel as well such as the coach being able to physically shape your body, immediate feedback, debriefing quickly and being back in the chamber quickly as well as others.
No, you can't swoop in the tunnel and yes, you are entitled to your opinion of thinking tunnel time is overpriced. I'm just pointing out that there's a lot more to it than just cost per minute of flight time. It's also fun as hell

Canuck 0
Your points are well taken about the coaching, although a good freefall coach can also give immediate feedback and physically shape body position (I do it all the time on AFF jumps). The other thing is, all the tunnel time in the world won't help you launch exits and track - two very important parts of any group skydive.
I've only ever been in an outdoor tunnel, and yeah it was a friggin blast!!!
Canuck
billvon 3,080
>occurs.
There's a hard lower limit due to power costs. Power accounts for a significant fraction of tunnel time cost.
>Now I'm sure all the Skyventure folks will jump in and say how low their
> profit margins are - bullshit - nobody invests millions of dollars trying to
> make hundreds.
Ever met any DZO's?
billvon 3,080
Power at the Perris tunnel is pretty much always less than 600kw. 500 would be a good average from the data I've seen so far.
quade 4
The World's Most Boring Skydiver
QuoteMost of your math I can follow. But, 2000 operating hours per year? That's not even 6 hours a day. I think it's pretty safe to say that most tunnels are running a hell of a lot more than that. That puts the profit up considerably.
Perris doesn't run it during the daytime on weekdays - limited business but more critically a much higher power cost. They shut down at midnight, so that's a potential max of 6 or 7 hours depending on when the peak period ends.
You can bump up the average on the weekends, but I imagine it's hard to run at 100% utilization. When I was there last week for a 15, I was the only customer in the 30 minute block. The safety guy would do a minute spell in between my 2.5s, and we shutdown when I got done ... probably around 21 minutes of operating time.
I thought Paul's numbers had a lot of rounding up, but if you did end up with a $100/hr net profit, that's 200k/yr on a 2mil investment. A 10% return, after debt repayment on a 5 year schedule, isn't doing too badly. Certainly the sort of numbers that SkyVenture would talk up to sell more franchises.
Remster 30
QuoteI just think for people like me, who skydive on a budget, that you get more bang for your buck doing the "real thing."
Thats my point too. For most non-competitive jumpers on a limited money OR vacation time budget, I'd mush much rather jump out of a perfectly good airplane.
Karen and I are toying with the possibility of a tunnel camp in March, but taking the time off to just fly in a tunnel doenst appeal to much to us and we'd want to combine that with a boogie or something.
As everything, the tunnel is a tool in my case and I treat it as such. Yes, I would rather jump also. Will I go to a tunnel again? Sure, if I develop an issue that I (or a coach) cant seem to work out on the ground and the air.
jmho
Robert
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
QuotePerris doesn't run it during the daytime on weekdays
Perris Skyventure in closed from 11:45am to 6:15pm Monday throung Friday for 4 month in the summer ONLY!
QuoteThey shut down at midnight,
Perris Skyventure will also operate as long as there are customers booked.
You're not as good as you think you are. Seriously.
Shark 0
QuotePerris doesn't run it during the daytime on weekdays
You must not have been there lately. I've taken students there in the mornings typically between 9 & 11.
billvon 3,080
>throung Friday for 4 month in the summer ONLY!
Yep, and that's a power company, not a business, issue.
Quotethat's a power company, not a business, issue.
In support of what your saying, this sort of thing is more common with the types of tunnels pulling that much juice, the Open Air North Carolina tunnel, also has time restrictions, aka peak time, which forces closure during certain hours in the summer.
Not a business issue, although can cause issues with business

Paulipod 0




Bodyflight Bedford
www.bodyflight.co.uk

I can't wait to get over there, need to time it with a trip from Gunti!
Paulipod 0

Bodyflight Bedford
www.bodyflight.co.uk
billvon 3,080
I've been trying to get them to install solar (which just happens to peak out at the same time that they need the power) for a while now - no luck yet.
quade 4
How many solar panels and how much area would it take to generate 750 kw?
I know, you say it doesn't draw 750 kw, but I figure you also have to take into account some losses and the potential that they -may- want to run the motors at full power every now and then for some reason.
Also, what would the initial investment be?
The World's Most Boring Skydiver
Exactly what I was getting at. They make a profit, thus are able to keep their doors open.
There are some people on this forum who believe that tunnel owners make a HOARD of money (and actually hate the owners for it...wanting them to drop prices and 'play nice'). Yet, you and I know that their profit margin is not that large and they really -can't- do that or they'd go under.
That is what my original post is all about when I replied to Zoter.
ltdiver
Don't tell me the sky's the limit when there are footprints on the moon
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