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#1
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My partners & I sold our Cherokee 180 a couple months ago & have begun
looking for a C-182 (fits our mission profile). A local mechanic also recommended a Cherokee 6. Most we've looked at have been a bit outside of our price envelope. We've now found one that's in our price range. Anyone have any recommendations of things to look for in a 260 HP Six? Gotchas? None of us know much about the Six. Two of us have hi-perf in 182s. Thanks! -- CP-ASEL, instrument, CFI |
#2
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Try looking on Google groups. There was a recent discussion about Cherokee
6's. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel "Steven Barnes" wrote in message .. . My partners & I sold our Cherokee 180 a couple months ago & have begun looking for a C-182 (fits our mission profile). A local mechanic also recommended a Cherokee 6. Most we've looked at have been a bit outside of our price envelope. We've now found one that's in our price range. Anyone have any recommendations of things to look for in a 260 HP Six? Gotchas? None of us know much about the Six. Two of us have hi-perf in 182s. Thanks! -- CP-ASEL, instrument, CFI |
#3
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Steven Barnes wrote:
My partners & I sold our Cherokee 180 a couple months ago & have begun looking for a C-182 (fits our mission profile). A local mechanic also recommended a Cherokee 6. Most we've looked at have been a bit outside of our price envelope. We've now found one that's in our price range. Anyone have any recommendations of things to look for in a 260 HP Six? Gotchas? None of us know much about the Six. Two of us have hi-perf in 182s. If your mission fits the C-182, you may also want to take a look at the 235 hp version of the 4-seat Cherokee (variously known as the 235/Charger/Pathfinder/Dakota). The Six is good if you need the extra seats. If you can do with 4 seats, the 235 hp Cherokee is more along the lines of a C-182 in terms of both capabilities and price. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200801/1 |
#4
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On 01/18/08 13:56, JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote:
Steven Barnes wrote: My partners & I sold our Cherokee 180 a couple months ago & have begun looking for a C-182 (fits our mission profile). A local mechanic also recommended a Cherokee 6. Most we've looked at have been a bit outside of our price envelope. We've now found one that's in our price range. Anyone have any recommendations of things to look for in a 260 HP Six? Gotchas? None of us know much about the Six. Two of us have hi-perf in 182s. If your mission fits the C-182, you may also want to take a look at the 235 hp version of the 4-seat Cherokee (variously known as the 235/Charger/Pathfinder/Dakota). The Six is good if you need the extra seats. If you can do with 4 seats, the 235 hp Cherokee is more along the lines of a C-182 in terms of both capabilities and price. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) Isn't there a large difference in insurance requirements/premiums between a 4 and a 6-seat airplane as well? -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane, USUA Ultralight Pilot Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#5
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![]() Mark Hansen wrote: On 01/18/08 13:56, JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote: Steven Barnes wrote: My partners & I sold our Cherokee 180 a couple months ago & have begun looking for a C-182 (fits our mission profile). A local mechanic also recommended a Cherokee 6. Most we've looked at have been a bit outside of our price envelope. We've now found one that's in our price range. Anyone have any recommendations of things to look for in a 260 HP Six? Gotchas? None of us know much about the Six. Two of us have hi-perf in 182s. If your mission fits the C-182, you may also want to take a look at the 235 hp version of the 4-seat Cherokee (variously known as the 235/Charger/Pathfinder/Dakota). The Six is good if you need the extra seats. If you can do with 4 seats, the 235 hp Cherokee is more along the lines of a C-182 in terms of both capabilities and price. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) Isn't there a large difference in insurance requirements/premiums between a 4 and a 6-seat airplane as well? There can be. I insure my Bonanza for four seats only. When I shopped for a 206 about 4 years ago I was quoted two prices for insurance and the savings were worth doing if you didn't want six seats. |
#6
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The older 235's have the same airframe as our 180. Too cramped. To get the
larger airframe in a Dakota type plane, puts us out of our price range. I'm going to call our old insurance company for a rough quote to see where we're at in a Six. "Mark Hansen" wrote in message ... On 01/18/08 13:56, JGalban via AviationKB.com wrote: Steven Barnes wrote: My partners & I sold our Cherokee 180 a couple months ago & have begun looking for a C-182 (fits our mission profile). A local mechanic also recommended a Cherokee 6. Most we've looked at have been a bit outside of our price envelope. We've now found one that's in our price range. Anyone have any recommendations of things to look for in a 260 HP Six? Gotchas? None of us know much about the Six. Two of us have hi-perf in 182s. If your mission fits the C-182, you may also want to take a look at the 235 hp version of the 4-seat Cherokee (variously known as the 235/Charger/Pathfinder/Dakota). The Six is good if you need the extra seats. If you can do with 4 seats, the 235 hp Cherokee is more along the lines of a C-182 in terms of both capabilities and price. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) Isn't there a large difference in insurance requirements/premiums between a 4 and a 6-seat airplane as well? -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane, USUA Ultralight Pilot Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#7
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Steven Barnes wrote:
The older 235's have the same airframe as our 180. Too cramped. To get the larger airframe in a Dakota type plane, puts us out of our price range. Do you mean width, length or both? I thought the Dakota was the same width as all of the PA028 series. I know they stretched the Arrow in 1972, but I don't know much about the Dakota. Is it just longer than the older 235s or did they increase the width as well? I'm looking at a nice Arrow III at the moment, but the trouble is the cabin is so narrow compared to my former 182. I thought you had to move to the PA-32 to get a wider Piper cabin, but I'm not intimately familiar with the Piper line as I'm pretty much a Cessna guy. However, I must admit that Piper's are cheap to buy compared to a Cessna of similar performance and equipment. I just don't find the PA-28 series comparable to the 182 in comfort for flights beyond 2 hours. I flew the 182 4 hours or more several times with no problem, but found the club Arrow I flew most recently to be uncomfortable past about 1.5 hours. Matt |
#8
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To be honest I don't know about the width part. I know that the length got
stretched around 1973 or 1974 with the Challenger, right? Even then, we want a bit more width. A agree that for the same money we could get a newer (or better equipped) 235 vs a 182. So, we were willing to pay the Cessna price premium. Our price range in anywhere up to low-mid 80K. More often than not, we won't need 6 seats. Although, I have an opportunity for a flight next weekend where I'd need 5... :-) "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Steven Barnes wrote: The older 235's have the same airframe as our 180. Too cramped. To get the larger airframe in a Dakota type plane, puts us out of our price range. Do you mean width, length or both? I thought the Dakota was the same width as all of the PA028 series. I know they stretched the Arrow in 1972, but I don't know much about the Dakota. Is it just longer than the older 235s or did they increase the width as well? I'm looking at a nice Arrow III at the moment, but the trouble is the cabin is so narrow compared to my former 182. I thought you had to move to the PA-32 to get a wider Piper cabin, but I'm not intimately familiar with the Piper line as I'm pretty much a Cessna guy. However, I must admit that Piper's are cheap to buy compared to a Cessna of similar performance and equipment. I just don't find the PA-28 series comparable to the 182 in comfort for flights beyond 2 hours. I flew the 182 4 hours or more several times with no problem, but found the club Arrow I flew most recently to be uncomfortable past about 1.5 hours. Matt |
#9
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The older 235's have the same airframe as our 180. Too cramped. To get the
larger airframe in a Dakota type plane, puts us out of our price range. Look for a Pathfinder. Same engine and airframe as the Dakota, much lower price. If you can fit it in the door, you can fly. It's a great plane. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#10
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I have owned a 1965 PA32-260 since Feb 1996. It is a fairly simple plane
from a maintenance standpoint, basically a warrior on steroids. There are only a few repetive AD's, which include the fuel drain (50hrs), the fuel drain cover assembly (100hrs) (both of those are owner inspect items, just a nuisance to keep up with), rear seat retention, which is annual, and the old style bowtie yokes have a 100 hour inspection for cracks, and the older style landing gear links have a 500 hour dye penetrant inspection for cracks. Check to make sure the other ADs are all complied with (there isn't anything onerous there), most of them are old AD's from the 60's and 70's and should have been complied with a long time ago. The expensive problems are related to corrosion. Check the "hat section rails" on the belly, especially where they join the belly skin for corrosion. The insides are generally not painted and if moisture or exhaust get in there it can be an expensive repair, also check the belly skins for corrosion. Most likely along the exhaust trail and around the door step attach point. I wouldn't buy a Six or a PA-28 without a recent service bulletin SB1006, which is an inspection of the wing spars for corrosion. It involves pulling out the wing tanks, inspecting and treating the spar, replacing fuel and fuel vent lines and putting it all back together. Very few have corrosion, but when you do get it there, it means replacing or rebuilding the wings. There is also a service bulletin for checking the rear spar attach points (dissimilar metal) for corrosion. While you are in there, pull back the interior and look below the windows for corrosion caused by leaking windows. There is also a service bulletin for periodic checks of the stabilator attach point for corrosion (again dissimilar metals). Make sure the fuel valve drain exceeds the margins allowed by the fuel drain AD be a good margin. If it fails that AD, the fuel valve has to be replaced, and that is expensive (5 AMU's). For an older six, check the condition of the fiberglass tip tanks with attention for any delamination and also make sure the filler neck isn't pitted, as the there doesn't seem to be many places to repair those tanks. The filler neck is a steel ring bonded into the fiberglass. Other than that, there really isn't anything that sticks out as a problem area. The Six is a wonderful airplane, probably the best airplane piper ever built (OK, I am biased). The fact is though, it is a load hauler (mine's got a 1550lb useful load) built for cross country travel and yet it is economical enough at 14GPH to fly solo locally. Older ones have a higher useful load because they have less soundproofing and extra crap stuffed into them. It will take a couple hours to get used to a six, as the long nose limits the foward and down view somewhat. The airplane is a different airplane when it is full vs when it is flown solo, so be careful with flying with a full load. The PA28's all have the same cabin width. The PA32 is some 11 inches wider, which makes for some nice elbow room. |
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