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#1
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With the current depressed market for twins, it is interesting to
compare something like an SR22 or C210 to a Cessna 310. You can afford a lot of gas, insurance, and reserve for overhauls; with a $100K+ savings on the initial purchase price. Also, I'd be surprised if there is much more depreciation on the 310 or the 210 (aside from time on the engines & props), while the SR22 will probably depreciate another $100K in the next few years. Has anyone gone through the purchase decision of comparing twins to singles recently? If so I'd be interested to hear how the decision went. I included 3 current planes listed on Controller.com as examples (disclaimer: I got the performance stats off of various online sources so I'm sure that there are inaccuracies) 1968 Cessna 310 ------------------------------- Cruise 191kts Useful Load 1800lbs Climb 1800fpm Fuel Burn 30gph Price $99,900 (with G430 and Stormscope, 430/0 TSMOH) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...3 916EACA4B06 2003 Cirrus SR22 ------------------------------- Cruise 185kts Useful Load 1150lbs Climb 1400fpm Fuel Burn 20gph Price $319,900 (410 TT SNEW) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...3 916EACA4B06 1978 Cessna 210 ------------------------------- Cruise 167kts Useful Load 1400lbs Climb 1000fpm Fuel Burn 15gph Price $189,000 (with G530 and MX20, 530 SFRM) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...3 916EACA4B06 The SR22 is a really nice plane, but that 310 sure looks tempting for the price. I'm sure the numbers look similar when an F33 Bonanza and a B55 Baron are thrown into the mix also. Eric Bartsch 1959 Pilatus P-3 A-848 http://www.hometown.aol.com/bartscher/P3A848.html |
#2
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The only cautions I would have with the 310 that you listed is the
transaction at the other end and maintance. Suppose your situation changed and you had to sell? With the low asking price you might be able to get out even relatively quickly, or not. So would a really cherry late model 310 with all the upgrades sell easier for the 200K they get?? Don't know. Just something to think about. I would also assume at least 10k/year in maintenance for any 310, and if less - great. Andy |
#4
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On 3 Dec 2006 16:20:12 -0800, "
wrote: With the current depressed market for twins, it is interesting to compare something like an SR22 or C210 to a Cessna 310. You can afford a lot of gas, insurance, and reserve for overhauls; with a $100K+ savings on the initial purchase price. Also, I'd be surprised if there is much more depreciation on the 310 or the 210 (aside from time on the engines & props), while the SR22 will probably depreciate another $100K in the next few years. Has anyone gone through the purchase decision of comparing twins to singles recently? If so I'd be interested to hear how the decision went. I included 3 current planes listed on Controller.com as examples (disclaimer: I got the performance stats off of various online sources so I'm sure that there are inaccuracies) 1968 Cessna 310 ------------------------------- Cruise 191kts Useful Load 1800lbs Climb 1800fpm Fuel Burn 30gph Price $99,900 (with G430 and Stormscope, 430/0 TSMOH) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...3 916EACA4B06 2003 Cirrus SR22 ------------------------------- Cruise 185kts Useful Load 1150lbs Climb 1400fpm Fuel Burn 20gph Price $319,900 (410 TT SNEW) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...3 916EACA4B06 1978 Cessna 210 ------------------------------- Cruise 167kts Useful Load 1400lbs Climb 1000fpm Fuel Burn 15gph Price $189,000 (with G530 and MX20, 530 SFRM) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...3 916EACA4B06 The SR22 is a really nice plane, but that 310 sure looks tempting for the price. I'm sure the numbers look similar when an F33 Bonanza and a B55 Baron are thrown into the mix also. Eric Bartsch 1959 Pilatus P-3 A-848 http://www.hometown.aol.com/bartscher/P3A848.html I don't have the data, but it wouldn't surprise me if the Cirrus would come out ahead, or at least even, once you add in the extra fuel burn of the 310, along with realistic figures for maintenance and engine(s) overhaul. The 210 would definitely come out ahead at those prices. Twins are cheap for a reason -- increased fuel and maintenance costs are some of them. My suggestion: Decide on your mission, then the airplance. Figure your loads, mission lengths, desired speeds, etc. The extra useful load in the 310 may not be meaningful if it's all used for fuel. --ron |
#5
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![]() Ron Rosenfeld wrote: On 3 Dec 2006 16:20:12 -0800, " Twins are cheap for a reason -- increased fuel and maintenance costs are some of them. Also a dramatic increase in downtime. There is a lot to break on a twin. -Robert |
#6
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Yeah, the 210 does look like the most attractive (and least financially
destructive) option of the 3. An extreme version of this type of comparison would be: New Cessna Citation Mustang ---------------------------------------------- Cruise 340kts Useful Load 3,100lbs Fuel Burn 100gph Price $2,300,000 1967 Boeing 727-100 Executive: ---------------------------------------------- Cruise 518kts Useful Load 80,000lbs Fuel Burn 1,350gph Price $1,200,000 (with low time engines, TCAS II, dual FMSs, bedroom, 47,000 TT) http://www.controller.com/listings/f...F D8F9935C407 I'm guessing the average Mustang owner would find the maintenance, fuel, crew costs, hangar, landing fees, etc... just a bit expensive; despite saving $1,100,000 on acquistion cost. Eric Bartsch 1959 Pilatus P-3 A-848 http://www.hometown.aol.com/bartscher/P3A848.html I don't have the data, but it wouldn't surprise me if the Cirrus would come out ahead, or at least even, once you add in the extra fuel burn of the 310, along with realistic figures for maintenance and engine(s) overhaul. The 210 would definitely come out ahead at those prices. Twins are cheap for a reason -- increased fuel and maintenance costs are some of them. My suggestion: Decide on your mission, then the airplance. Figure your loads, mission lengths, desired speeds, etc. The extra useful load in the 310 may not be meaningful if it's all used for fuel. --ron- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - |
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