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What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least 2
adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply |
#2
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The Stinson 108 series is the best buy in cost, maintenance, room, capacity
and fun to fly. The -3 has the bigger rudder designed for float operations that can give some problems in cross winds, but the the earlier models are just fine. The Franklins are 1/2 price on parts and overhauls and the Razorback Fabric gives the plane the durability to leave on the ramp with the spam-cans. So, built like a tank, can have a good one for mid-twenties and smooth running Franklin, gives this plane thumbs up. More new parts are available for a Stinson through TC holder,Univair than for a new Cessna or Piper. Robert Little than a new Cessna or Piper -- ---------------------------------------------------- This mailbox protected from junk email by Matador from MailFrontier, Inc. http://info.mailfrontier.com "Jim" wrote in message ... What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least 2 adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply |
#3
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What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least
2 adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. Well, choosing a "best" plane for any missions needs a little more info than a general class and how big inside it needs to be. But ... to me, you buy a taildragger so you can enjoy the backcountry, haul gear, and enjoy some real utility out of an airplane. And it's hard to beat a C185 for overall utility. - Mark |
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ok, ok, "best" was a poor choice of words.... how about "favorite"?
![]() -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply "Jim" wrote in message ... What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least 2 adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply |
#5
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How about the Maule - I have a '95 MX7180a. Simple, newer, cheaper
We use it to haul 2 and anything we want. Can take 4 adults plus bags and 2/3rd fuel. 1,000 lb useful, 180 horses is a cost/ performance sweet spot. Fixed prop is cheap and easy. 114knot cruise with our normal load and full power. I plan and get 110 with it backed off 100rpms. 10gph first hour 9gph afterwards. Can easily get 8gph but why. Why a tail dragger? There is no good reason other than 'something to do' in this pilot's opinion. I love it but have no illusions. Maule is 'more different' than most ramp visitors. Nice to standout from the Cessna/Piper crowd. I'd love more and bigger but can't justify the price. CS prop, bigger engine, bigger body Maule would all be good but... Minuses might include fabric and paint quality. You need a hangar. Butt dragging will cost you in insurance - much at first, less later if you are new to it. Cessna 180s and 185s seem great but older stuff is well, older, and clean newer stuff is expensive - especially the 185s. Will cost more to operate in any case. Will maintain value until they belly up. "Jim" wrote in message ... What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least 2 adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply |
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Jim wrote:
What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least 2 adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. My wife and I own a 150hp Piper Pacer we bought to get tailwheel experience. Its a fun little airplane. We have gone airplane camping in the Ut/Id/Mt mountains. I recommend the Pacer highly as a two-place plus some gear airplane, but wouldn't put my kids (and gear) in the back, at least not to the places we go... For serious backcountry hauling, I use my stol-equipped Skylane. I have recently been thinking about a 180/185, but cant justify spending double what the 182 is worth to buy a 180/185 project which is going to take a year or more to get it up to the same standards that my 182 is already at... I'm looking for a large nosefork for the 182, and plan to put a 6.00 nose wheel and 8.00 mains on it, and call it good... I can already operate out of 97% of the places where 185s go... MikeM Skylane '1MM see: http://home.utah.edu/~mgm17160/TwoMM.JPG Pacer '00Z see: http://home.utah.edu/~mgm17160/miken007.jpg |
#7
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![]() Jim wrote: What's your opinion about the best taildragger that has room for at least 2 adults plus kids? Reasons and experiences please. I'd say a Cessna 180. Kids don't stay kids for long, and the 180 will carry four adults. All metal, so it doesn't have to be hangared. Any A&P knows how to work on one. They *are* getting old, though, and good ones don't come cheap. The Maule MX-7-180B would be cheaper. They will also carry four, but they're a bit more cramped inside. Fuselage is fabric, which may give periodic trouble if kept outside. They're newer planes and parts are very easy to find. The 180B has a 180hp Lycoming with a CS prop. Avoid the 160 and 235hp models. They won't carry the load that the 180 carries. Check http://www.mauleairinc.com for performance specs. Stinsons are probably the best bang for the buck, but they're old and the Franklin engines aren't made anymore. Parts are still available, since the plant in Poland still has some engines they're parting out, but there could be some real trouble ahead there. AOPA Pilot had a good article on them a few months ago; should be on their web site somewhere. George Patterson A man who carries a cat by the tail learns something that can be learned no other way. |
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Why a tail dragger? There is no good reason other than 'something to do'
in this pilot's opinion. Exactly my idea. Just something to have fun in but still use to haul the wife and kids around when needed. I have the opportunity to put a 1/2 mile grass strip right infront of my house and am currently getting a good tailwheel checkout. I'm torn between two goals. I can either pursue a partnership in a faster complex plane for some serious cross country flying (which I do enough of to justify it), or I could go it on my own and pick up a fairly nice Cessna 170 and eventually build a hanger and a strip at my house. I'd still be able to rent a faster larger plane for the longer cross country trips. -- Jim Burns III Remove "nospam" to reply |
#9
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"Jim" wrote in
: Why a tail dragger? There is no good reason other than 'something to do' in this pilot's opinion. Exactly my idea. Just something to have fun in but still use to haul the wife and kids around when needed. I have the opportunity to put a 1/2 mile grass strip right infront of my house and am currently getting a good tailwheel checkout. I'm torn between two goals. I can either pursue a partnership in a faster complex plane for some serious cross country flying (which I do enough of to justify it), or I could go it on my own and pick up a fairly nice Cessna 170 and eventually build a hanger and a strip at my house. I'd still be able to rent a faster larger plane for the longer cross country trips. I have no experience here, and this IS an experimental, and therefore probably not what your looking for (some assembly required ;-)) But this seems to fit the bill: 4 place 1100-1300lbs+ usefull load, 40mph landing speed, up to 160mph cruising speed depending on engine. http://www.bearhawkaircraft.com/Bear...rhawkMain.html Cost will be between 50K-100K depending on engine choice and avionics... oh, plus a year or three of your life grin (base "alleged quickbuild" firewall back kit is 28K) I like the BIG cargo door.... better keep a scale in there, even with the capacity, seems it'd be easy to be tempted to fill it up with camping gear, moutain bike, cooler full of ice, 3 hunting dogs...... and get over wieght/out of balance. Take the above for what it cost you heh from an aviation newbie who's never even MET a CFI... (well, yet anyway) -- ET ![]() "A common mistake people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools."---- Douglas Adams |
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