![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have a chance to buy a 63 aztec in rough condition. It would be my
first plane. Engines have 1200 smoh but one has a cracked cylinder. (estimated repair, $5000?) Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?) Interior is poor ($5000 estimate?). Brand new props. Only 1 nav/com. older avionics. Auto pilot broken. It was used as a survey aircraft and has a certified hole cut. I could potentially use it for aerial work as my company subs about $50,000 in photography per year (5 jobs). I have a good pilot to split costs with. He has the commercial rating and would fly while working. Insurance would be $10,000 for the commercial type. I am a bit concerned about the $80/ hour fuel burn and the potential for gremlins on an older not so well maintained airplane. The price seems very reasonable which is the main motivation for buying. 25,000+5000+5000+5000= $40,000 for a aztec with new props, survey hole, new paint and interior. Am I missing something? Is this a good deal? Most of the similar year planes I have seen are about $80,000. My buddy is an avionics repaiman and would thoroughly check the plane prior to the purchase. Could it be resold at a profit if I needed to? Please give any advice as I don't want to make a big mistake. Thanks in advance. David *** Sent via http://www.automationtools.com *** Add a newsgroup interface to your website today. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "david" wrote in message ... I have a chance to buy a 63 aztec in rough condition. It would be my first plane. Engines have 1200 smoh but one has a cracked cylinder. (estimated repair, $5000?) Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?) Interior is poor ($5000 estimate?). Brand new props. Only 1 nav/com. older avionics. Auto pilot broken. It was used as a survey aircraft and has a certified hole cut. I could potentially use it for aerial work as my company subs about $50,000 in photography per year (5 jobs). I have a good pilot to split costs with. He has the commercial rating and would fly while working. Insurance would be $10,000 for the commercial type. I am a bit concerned about the $80/ hour fuel burn and the potential for gremlins on an older not so well maintained airplane. The price seems very reasonable which is the main motivation for buying. 25,000+5000+5000+5000= $40,000 for a aztec with new props, survey hole, new paint and interior. Am I missing something? Is this a good deal? Most of the similar year planes I have seen are about $80,000. My buddy is an avionics repaiman and would thoroughly check the plane prior to the purchase. Could it be resold at a profit if I needed to? Please give any advice as I don't want to make a big mistake. Thanks in advance. David *** Sent via http://www.automationtools.com *** Add a newsgroup interface to your website today. Buy it for $25K put $100K into it and you will have a $75K airplane. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, David, only you can answer this question: Are you ready for a
multi-year headache in exchange for perhaps saving yourself fairly significant money? If the answer is "yes", go for it. But be prepared for a long slog in the mud. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" "david" wrote in message ... I have a chance to buy a 63 aztec in rough condition. It would be my first plane. Engines have 1200 smoh but one has a cracked cylinder. (estimated repair, $5000?) Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?) Interior is poor ($5000 estimate?). Brand new props. Only 1 nav/com. older avionics. Auto pilot broken. It was used as a survey aircraft and has a certified hole cut. I could potentially use it for aerial work as my company subs about $50,000 in photography per year (5 jobs). I have a good pilot to split costs with. He has the commercial rating and would fly while working. Insurance would be $10,000 for the commercial type. I am a bit concerned about the $80/ hour fuel burn and the potential for gremlins on an older not so well maintained airplane. The price seems very reasonable which is the main motivation for buying. 25,000+5000+5000+5000= $40,000 for a aztec with new props, survey hole, new paint and interior. Am I missing something? Is this a good deal? Most of the similar year planes I have seen are about $80,000. My buddy is an avionics repaiman and would thoroughly check the plane prior to the purchase. Could it be resold at a profit if I needed to? Please give any advice as I don't want to make a big mistake. Thanks in advance. David |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
("david" wrote)
snip 25,000+5000+5000+5000= $40,000 for a aztec with new props, survey hole, new paint and interior. Am I missing something? Is this a good deal? Most of the similar year planes I have seen are about $80,000. My buddy is an avionics repaiman and would thoroughly check the plane prior to the purchase. Could it be resold at a profit if I needed to? Please give any advice as I don't want to make a big mistake. Thanks in advance. Saw this question a few years ago: If the plane was given to you (free) tomorrow, what would you do with it? Oh boy, I got a "free" plane with....[insert laundry list of liabilities here] Still a good deal? BTW, I've only seen Aztecs from the ground - I like em. Oh, here's the other rec.aviation question that often comes up - What's your projected average mission? Will something else (maybe) fill the bill? Or is the saying fit the bill? Good luck, keep us posted. -- Montblack http://lumma.de/mt/archives/bart.gif |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The risks in such a transaction are HUGE! If you LIKE fiddling with
planes, have lots of time available and a very supportive shop to work with, there is a chance you won't lose TOO much... the chance that you will have a satisfactory plane without things continually going wrong are slim, and the chance you can sell it at a profit is ZERO. People who do take on such a project do it as a pastime, and hope their pastime doesn't cost them TOO much. Rich david wrote: I have a chance to buy a 63 aztec in rough condition. Could it be resold at a profit if I needed to? Please give any advice as I don't want to make a big mistake. Thanks in advance. David |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?)
Since it cost me $12,000 to paint my Skyhawk, this seems a little low for an Aztec. www.Rosspilot.com |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
david wrote in message ...
I have a chance to buy a 63 aztec in rough condition. It would be my first plane. Engines have 1200 smoh but one has a cracked cylinder. (estimated repair, $5000?) Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?) Interior is poor ($5000 estimate?). Brand new props. Only 1 nav/com. older avionics. Auto pilot broken. What is your long range plan with the plane? Keep it? Sell it? This will determine whether or not this kind of investment is valuable. Although there are exceptions it is usually better to purchase a plane in the condition you want versus buying a fix-it upper and shelling out $10000s in the repair/refinishing process. However, the $25k purchase price makes this worth evaluating. If you completely overhaul the plane and make everything in it new - depending on airframe time, you probably have a market value $100k airplane. Skip a bit here/there and you probably have a $75k airplane, so you have a $50k budget to work with. Start with a few of the basics: What is the airframe time? Are all ADs complied with (should look at the SBs too) - did you have an independent mechanic verify this? It can cost a 1000s if not 10000s to comply with ADs and SBs. Is there damage history to the plane (and is it recent?) - if so this will subtract significantly from the end market value. A cracked cylyinder probably won't cost $5k to repair, but I'm guessing these engines will need more work than the $5k to be/stay airworthy. A safe bet would be to expect a MOH in the near future... Factoryengines.com lists an overhauled IO540 at $22k each. What are the compressions? How long ago was the MOH? How long since the mags were overhauled? How about the ignition wiring and plugs? I think most Lycomings are a 12 year or 2000hr TBO. New paint on a twin will be about $10k. Hopefully they will not find corrosion when the paint is peeled. A nice interior on a twin will be $10k. $5k if you go with fabrics only (no leather) and do not replace the interior plastics. New windows would be $2k installed. Avionics are a wild card and are up to you. You can easily spend $30-40k on a panel. However, for the most bang for the buck, you could add 1 GNS430 for about $10k installed and have IFR certified GPS/VOR/LOC/GS. The plane would probably need a good audio panel/intercom, which would be $3500 installed. Autopilots particularly older ones can be troublesome to repair/maintain - you may want to consider purchasing a new AP. An STEC-30 (altitude hold) autopilot will cost about $10k installed. You could look on Ebay to find a used KX-155 and KI209 as a backup NAV/COM. New gyros might be a consideration, as would be a reconfiguration of the panel to a standard T instrument layout. This would be another $2-3K. Another thing to consider - expect LONG downtimes during your refurbishment. Probably a month (at least) for your major overhauls. A month for the P&I. A month for the avionics and gyro work. Plus a few more months to get various gremlins worked out. That would be a best case... Paying $10k/yr insurance plus hangar, plus cost of capital, plus maintenance bills really sucks when you are not getting to fly. On that note, it might make sense to only use the plane privately for the first year while you are doing the rehab. No sense in paying commercial insurance rates if the plane is going to sit in the maintenance shop. Last, you mentioned an $80/hr operating rate for the Aztec. I assume you mean the fuel only cost. Most light twins cost about 2.5x the hourly fuel cost to operate. Good luck! -Nathan |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Doesn't sound like a good first plane to me. First, you have no idea of
what everything will cost to fix. Second you seem concerned with the cost of the fuel burn, this will turn out to be a trivial expense in the scheme of things. The only way it might make sense is if you NEED a twin, can fly it "as is" (after replacing the cylinder) and plan to sell it in a few years cheap. Mike MU-2 "david" wrote in message ... I have a chance to buy a 63 aztec in rough condition. It would be my first plane. Engines have 1200 smoh but one has a cracked cylinder. (estimated repair, $5000?) Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?) Interior is poor ($5000 estimate?). Brand new props. Only 1 nav/com. older avionics. Auto pilot broken. It was used as a survey aircraft and has a certified hole cut. I could potentially use it for aerial work as my company subs about $50,000 in photography per year (5 jobs). I have a good pilot to split costs with. He has the commercial rating and would fly while working. Insurance would be $10,000 for the commercial type. I am a bit concerned about the $80/ hour fuel burn and the potential for gremlins on an older not so well maintained airplane. The price seems very reasonable which is the main motivation for buying. 25,000+5000+5000+5000= $40,000 for a aztec with new props, survey hole, new paint and interior. Am I missing something? Is this a good deal? Most of the similar year planes I have seen are about $80,000. My buddy is an avionics repaiman and would thoroughly check the plane prior to the purchase. Could it be resold at a profit if I needed to? Please give any advice as I don't want to make a big mistake. Thanks in advance. David *** Sent via http://www.automationtools.com *** Add a newsgroup interface to your website today. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Rosspilot" wrote in message ... Paint is poor. ($5000 estimate?) Since it cost me $12,000 to paint my Skyhawk, this seems a little low for an Aztec. Ouch, it's only costing me about 6K to have the Navion painted. Of course, I'm doing it in a rather low cost area of the country. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I agree completely with your conclusions- a new owner will never recover the
full value of investments in refurbishing a beat airplane, 20-30cents on a dollar may be close. However, your estimates on the cost of repairs seem a bit low. Paint on a twin for $10,000 is kind of a budget job. For that amount of money you can expect the screws and panels to be painted over (not removed prior to paint), as well as no extras like painting the gear legs or wheel wells. Don't be surprised if there are a fair number of paint runs or overspray. A top notch job, with complete body work, stripping, primer, paint, and replacement of all hardware with stainless will run closer to $20,000. A new interior with leather, new carpeting, and a cleanup of the headliner will run more like $15,000. You might do an Airtex home job for around $5,000 if you have the time. New IO-540's will probably be on the order of $30-35,000 each, particularly with new hoses and accessories, unless they're turbocharged, which could go up to around $45,000 each. Don't forget prop overhauls as well. New boots will be around $25,000-30,000 as well. Avionics can be the biggest variable. An autopilot (nearly a necessity for flying a twin in weather) is going to be more like $15-20,000. The S-TEC 30 is a good basic unit (I have one in my single with altitude hold), but may not adequate for a plane flown frequently in IMC. I have experienced most of the above over the last two years that I have owned a B-55, except the engines. Instead of boots, I went with TKS, which provides known icing certification by STC. Unlike boots, there is no maintenance required, and they will not need replacement unless you run the wing into something. New thicker windows were installed by Beryl D'Shannon, and paint was done by Dial Eastern in Ohio. The plane is now at Airmod for a complete leather interior. From personal experience, I will never recover even a small fraction of my investments. This approach is OK if you plan on keeping the plane for a while, but if you want to trade up every few years, a better approach might be to find something that comes closest to meeting your needs at a good price, then selling up when you want more speed or room. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Gear problem in an Aztec PA23-250 | Robert Borucki | General Aviation | 3 | December 17th 04 07:08 PM |
WTB: Piper Aztec C | Jim Burns | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | July 20th 04 07:38 PM |
PIREP: 2I3 (Rough River State Park, Falls of Rough, KY) | Kyler Laird | General Aviation | 0 | March 1st 04 12:11 AM |
Piper Aztec handling qualities | John McFarlane | Owning | 1 | October 3rd 03 04:11 PM |
rough engine just after power reduction | Sydney Hoeltzli | Owning | 11 | July 30th 03 03:37 PM |