![]() |
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 |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It was march of this year.
Maybe he just knew a good deal when he saw it. If you take care of your plane, it will take care of you. His comments were that he was glad to finally look at a plane that wasnt trashed out and had good avionics. Jeff "Tom S." wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message ... This is not always true, when I sold my old cherokee 180, I had put a new garmin stack in, 430,x-ponder, audio panel and some other stuff, I got back 90% of what I had into the plane, plus, it sold in 4 days. It must have been a good market then because that is quite extraordinary (unless you're dealing with someone who has more money than buying savvy). http://www.planedata.com/aircraft%20...%20methods.htm |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
the KX155's are great radio's , it should be easy for you to sell the extra one
unless you keep it as a spare. your getting a 1992 bonanza for 75k ? thats one hell of a deal, I was looking around at them just a second ago and found a 1993 for $200k, and some 1970's ones for 130-170k - if you get it for 75k its a plane you can make money back on by the looks of other F33A's. I paid 85k for my 1978 Turbo Arrow III then an additional 20k for the new avionics. Jeff http://www.turboarrow3.com "Tom S." wrote: "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: I plan to buy my first airplane and "trade-up" in about 3-4 years. I expect my initial investment will be around $75K. At that price, it does not seem to be worth putting in brand new avionics to the tune of $12-$15K (thinking specifically about a Garmin 430/MX-20 combo, or a GX-50/MX-20 combo). At the sametime, I really would like the situational awareness benefits of such avionics. Is it practical to consider buying used avionics? If so, where might I get used avionics (web site pointers, phone numbers, or email addresses would be helpful in addition to names of places). Many avionics shops have used gear that they replaced. Finding _current_ equipment is going to be tougher. This place has refurbished equipment: http://www.psavionics.com/ The F33A I'm buying has a basic panel (dual KX-155's, ADF, DME, Loran, Xpder...) which is what I want. I figure to remove the 2nd KX-155 and the Loran and replace it with a Garmin GNS-530 ($13,150 installed) http://www.pacific-coast-avionics.co...il.asp?id=4448. Also we'll replace the transponder and put in a Garmin GTX-327 and the Audio Pnael with a PSEngineering audio panal (7000B) and intercom. Then it's a TATurbo Whirlwind (Turbo Normalization) and an oxygen system. All in all, it's looking to be about $78K, but I expect to have this plane for at least five to seven years. It's also a 1992 model, so it's not like having an antique bird that's over-equipped. Putting an elaborate panel into an antique is just going to cost a lot of money that will never hold it's value (or so I'm led to believe). Like anything else, make the equipment suit the mission just as you'd build a home that suits the neighborhood. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jeff, I have "narrowed it down" to three planes:
1965 Piper Comanche PA-24-260 1978 Mooney "201" M20J 1977 Piper Arrow III -Sami Jeff wrote: what kind of plane are you getting, if you dont mind... jeff "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: I plan to buy my first airplane and "trade-up" in about 3-4 years. I expect my initial investment will be around $75K. At that price, it does not seem to be worth putting in brand new avionics to the tune of $12-$15K (thinking specifically about a Garmin 430/MX-20 combo, or a GX-50/MX-20 combo). At the sametime, I really would like the situational awareness benefits of such avionics. Is it practical to consider buying used avionics? If so, where might I get used avionics (web site pointers, phone numbers, or email addresses would be helpful in addition to names of places). By the way, thanks for all the great help I have been getting on this forum. It really helps me make some hard decisions about my first purchase. -Sami |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
comanche 260 , awsome plane, I saw one take off with full fuel, 90 degree's
outside and 4 adults. There were like 7 of us out there watching to see if it would get off the ground, me, the fuel guy and several others, it didnt have any problems. Comanche's are like mooney's in that they are very clean airplanes. Mooney, dont know much about them except the cockpit looks awful small. Arrow III, you may be a bit disappointed, I have flown the Normally Aspirated Arrow III and I own a Turbo Arrow III. The normally aspirated Arrow is not a fast airplane. About 130-135 kts. The Turbo Arrow is a 150 kt airplane and gives much better performance then the normally aspirated one. The T-arrow will maintain its 200 HP all the way up to 12,000 ft DA. I have taken off from an airport with a DA of 8800 ft, gross weight, no problems. The engine in the T-Arrow is different then the normal arrow, the T-Arrow has a Cont. 6 cylinder fuel injected turbo charged engine and is actually rated at either 210 or 215 HP cant remember which. The same engine is used in some other planes at 210 HP. The insurance on it is not bad either, was alot cheaper then the comanche 400 I was originally looking at. Also the T-Arrow seems to perform its best at 8000-13,000 ft. The POH says at 17,000 it will do 172 kts. At 14,000 a few days ago, I had a TAS of 165 kts and a GS of 183 kts. (of course going the other way I was only getting like 140kts). With the turbo, you can choose higher altitudes to take advantage of winds. Jeff http://www.turboarrow3.com "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: Jeff, I have "narrowed it down" to three planes: 1965 Piper Comanche PA-24-260 1978 Mooney "201" M20J 1977 Piper Arrow III -Sami Jeff wrote: what kind of plane are you getting, if you dont mind... jeff "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: I plan to buy my first airplane and "trade-up" in about 3-4 years. I expect my initial investment will be around $75K. At that price, it does not seem to be worth putting in brand new avionics to the tune of $12-$15K (thinking specifically about a Garmin 430/MX-20 combo, or a GX-50/MX-20 combo). At the sametime, I really would like the situational awareness benefits of such avionics. Is it practical to consider buying used avionics? If so, where might I get used avionics (web site pointers, phone numbers, or email addresses would be helpful in addition to names of places). By the way, thanks for all the great help I have been getting on this forum. It really helps me make some hard decisions about my first purchase. -Sami |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff" wrote in message ... It was march of this year. Maybe he just knew a good deal when he saw it. If you take care of your plane, it will take care of you. His comments were that he was glad to finally look at a plane that wasnt trashed out and had good avionics. How soon after adding the upgrades did you sell it? Adding avionics to a plane is like adding options to a used car; you seldom get much back when you sell it. Like buying a car, it depreciates by about 2/3rds just driving it off the dealers lot. "Tom S." wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message ... This is not always true, when I sold my old cherokee 180, I had put a new garmin stack in, 430,x-ponder, audio panel and some other stuff, I got back 90% of what I had into the plane, plus, it sold in 4 days. It must have been a good market then because that is quite extraordinary (unless you're dealing with someone who has more money than buying savvy). http://www.planedata.com/aircraft%20...%20methods.htm |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff" wrote in message ... the KX155's are great radio's , it should be easy for you to sell the extra one unless you keep it as a spare. your getting a 1992 bonanza for 75k ? No, I'm getting it for about $220K and adding about $75K in upgrades. As I mentioned, I expect to have this plane for five to seven years. Also, it's pretty much in pristine condition. That's why I have no problem with adding turbo-normalizing, builtin oxygen system, a 530 and a couple other goodies. thats one hell of a deal, I was looking around at them just a second ago and found a 1993 for $200k, and some 1970's ones for 130-170k - if you get it for 75k its a plane you can make money back on by the looks of other F33A's. I paid 85k for my 1978 Turbo Arrow III then an additional 20k for the new avionics. Jeff http://www.turboarrow3.com "Tom S." wrote: |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
O. Sami Saydjari wrote: Jeff, I have "narrowed it down" to three planes: 1965 Piper Comanche PA-24-260 1978 Mooney "201" M20J 1977 Piper Arrow III The Arrow doesn't get as much advantage from being complex as the other two planes. If you want something in the Cherokee series the 235s are faster and carry more without the added maintenance costs of retractable gear. They're popular with flight schools, though. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK. I added one to my list today. What about a Cessna 210 Centurion.
They seem to have a good cruise speed, a good range, and good lift capacity. What do you think about them? -Sami Jeff wrote: comanche 260 , awsome plane, I saw one take off with full fuel, 90 degree's outside and 4 adults. There were like 7 of us out there watching to see if it would get off the ground, me, the fuel guy and several others, it didnt have any problems. Comanche's are like mooney's in that they are very clean airplanes. Mooney, dont know much about them except the cockpit looks awful small. Arrow III, you may be a bit disappointed, I have flown the Normally Aspirated Arrow III and I own a Turbo Arrow III. The normally aspirated Arrow is not a fast airplane. About 130-135 kts. The Turbo Arrow is a 150 kt airplane and gives much better performance then the normally aspirated one. The T-arrow will maintain its 200 HP all the way up to 12,000 ft DA. I have taken off from an airport with a DA of 8800 ft, gross weight, no problems. The engine in the T-Arrow is different then the normal arrow, the T-Arrow has a Cont. 6 cylinder fuel injected turbo charged engine and is actually rated at either 210 or 215 HP cant remember which. The same engine is used in some other planes at 210 HP. The insurance on it is not bad either, was alot cheaper then the comanche 400 I was originally looking at. Also the T-Arrow seems to perform its best at 8000-13,000 ft. The POH says at 17,000 it will do 172 kts. At 14,000 a few days ago, I had a TAS of 165 kts and a GS of 183 kts. (of course going the other way I was only getting like 140kts). With the turbo, you can choose higher altitudes to take advantage of winds. Jeff http://www.turboarrow3.com "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: Jeff, I have "narrowed it down" to three planes: 1965 Piper Comanche PA-24-260 1978 Mooney "201" M20J 1977 Piper Arrow III -Sami Jeff wrote: what kind of plane are you getting, if you dont mind... jeff "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: I plan to buy my first airplane and "trade-up" in about 3-4 years. I expect my initial investment will be around $75K. At that price, it does not seem to be worth putting in brand new avionics to the tune of $12-$15K (thinking specifically about a Garmin 430/MX-20 combo, or a GX-50/MX-20 combo). At the sametime, I really would like the situational awareness benefits of such avionics. Is it practical to consider buying used avionics? If so, where might I get used avionics (web site pointers, phone numbers, or email addresses would be helpful in addition to names of places). By the way, thanks for all the great help I have been getting on this forum. It really helps me make some hard decisions about my first purchase. -Sami |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A list that includes both the Arrow and the Centurion is a rather
odd list. The Centurion is very expensive to insure, and maybe impossible unless you have 500 hrs and an instrument rating. I'd have thought that a 182RG or a TR182 would be more in line with the others in your list. I bought a TR182 a year ago and have never regretted it. Figure around $130-140K for a decent one with OK but elderly avionics. John "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote in message ... OK. I added one to my list today. What about a Cessna 210 Centurion. They seem to have a good cruise speed, a good range, and good lift capacity. What do you think about them? -Sami Jeff wrote: comanche 260 , awsome plane, I saw one take off with full fuel, 90 degree's outside and 4 adults. There were like 7 of us out there watching to see if it would get off the ground, me, the fuel guy and several others, it didnt have any problems. Comanche's are like mooney's in that they are very clean airplanes. Mooney, dont know much about them except the cockpit looks awful small. Arrow III, you may be a bit disappointed, I have flown the Normally Aspirated Arrow III and I own a Turbo Arrow III. The normally aspirated Arrow is not a fast airplane. About 130-135 kts. The Turbo Arrow is a 150 kt airplane and gives much better performance then the normally aspirated one. The T-arrow will maintain its 200 HP all the way up to 12,000 ft DA. I have taken off from an airport with a DA of 8800 ft, gross weight, no problems. The engine in the T-Arrow is different then the normal arrow, the T-Arrow has a Cont. 6 cylinder fuel injected turbo charged engine and is actually rated at either 210 or 215 HP cant remember which. The same engine is used in some other planes at 210 HP. The insurance on it is not bad either, was alot cheaper then the comanche 400 I was originally looking at. Also the T-Arrow seems to perform its best at 8000-13,000 ft. The POH says at 17,000 it will do 172 kts. At 14,000 a few days ago, I had a TAS of 165 kts and a GS of 183 kts. (of course going the other way I was only getting like 140kts). With the turbo, you can choose higher altitudes to take advantage of winds. Jeff http://www.turboarrow3.com "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: Jeff, I have "narrowed it down" to three planes: 1965 Piper Comanche PA-24-260 1978 Mooney "201" M20J 1977 Piper Arrow III -Sami Jeff wrote: what kind of plane are you getting, if you dont mind... jeff "O. Sami Saydjari" wrote: I plan to buy my first airplane and "trade-up" in about 3-4 years. I expect my initial investment will be around $75K. At that price, it does not seem to be worth putting in brand new avionics to the tune of $12-$15K (thinking specifically about a Garmin 430/MX-20 combo, or a GX-50/MX-20 combo). At the sametime, I really would like the situational awareness benefits of such avionics. Is it practical to consider buying used avionics? If so, where might I get used avionics (web site pointers, phone numbers, or email addresses would be helpful in addition to names of places). By the way, thanks for all the great help I have been getting on this forum. It really helps me make some hard decisions about my first purchase. -Sami |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I sold it about 8 months after I added the options.
See the thing was, the guy had been looking for a decent plane all over, everyone he said he looked at was ragged out, rusted out or something. He Said he was tired of looking and since my plane wasnt not ragged out, rusted out and had good avionics he took it. A CFI I know who was building time ferried it to his airport for him. The guy who bought it was a pilot for an airline. I picked him up at the vegas airport when he flew in took him to see the plane then had to hurry him back for his return flight. You may be surprised at some of the planes being sold and prices people ask for them. I looked at alot of planes before settling on the turbo arrow I got. "Tom S." wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message ... It was march of this year. Maybe he just knew a good deal when he saw it. If you take care of your plane, it will take care of you. His comments were that he was glad to finally look at a plane that wasnt trashed out and had good avionics. How soon after adding the upgrades did you sell it? Adding avionics to a plane is like adding options to a used car; you seldom get much back when you sell it. Like buying a car, it depreciates by about 2/3rds just driving it off the dealers lot. "Tom S." wrote: "Jeff" wrote in message ... This is not always true, when I sold my old cherokee 180, I had put a new garmin stack in, 430,x-ponder, audio panel and some other stuff, I got back 90% of what I had into the plane, plus, it sold in 4 days. It must have been a good market then because that is quite extraordinary (unless you're dealing with someone who has more money than buying savvy). http://www.planedata.com/aircraft%20...%20methods.htm |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Vendor recomendation: Stark Avionics | Ron | Home Built | 2 | December 8th 04 05:25 PM |
Real World test bed for avionics - Megawatts at Delano | MikeremlaP | Home Built | 0 | June 2nd 04 04:24 AM |
hardware to mount avionics trays | Matthew M. Jurotich | Home Built | 1 | November 17th 03 10:56 PM |
Avionics ? | Hankal | Instrument Flight Rules | 5 | August 25th 03 06:06 PM |
Avionics Swap Group | Jim Weir | Home Built | 3 | July 7th 03 02:27 PM |