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#11
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![]() Bill wrote: I appreciate the comments and info. I indeed am looking at a 2-man partnership on a 182, as such arrangement is easily doable, no sweat, with the budget I have in mind. Any particular year model recommendations? I wouldn't go any newer than the mid 70's. After this the ceiling went down as the empty weight went up. |
#12
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In article , Bill
wrote: I appreciate the comments and info. I indeed am looking at a 2-man partnership on a 182, as such arrangement is easily doable, no sweat, with the budget I have in mind. Be sure to read the Air Safety Foundations review of the 182. Free download, PDF file. |
#13
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Bill wrote: I am looking at a small airplane for recreational "Sunday afternoon local area" flying and also for the once-a-month weekend 500 NM trip If you're going to do the 500nm trip that often I think you've got to optimize for that. The difference in flight time between a 155kt plane and a 115kt plane is over an hour, and practically speaking it crosses a threshold where the passengers (and fuel tanks) will need a pitstop, probably adding another hour to the total time. That means an old 172 (assuming it can carry your family and bag) gets you there in about 5.5 hours with one stop. If your passengers can stand a 4 hour flight (I'm including .3 in all these beyond flight time) then a 182 can carry enough fuel to get you there in one leg, 1.5 hours sooner. A Comanche or Mooney could shave another 30 minutes off the flight time. So now you have to ask yourself: Would you (and your family) make the trip once a month if the trip involved 11 hours of flying? What if it was only 7 or 8? Cessna 172 Probably not enough payload, unless your kids are small. Range is weak for your 500nm trip (assuming you can fill the tanks). In your pricerange. Lots to choose from. Cessna 182 Very popular, and hold a value disproportionate to the raw numbers (speed, payload, fuel efficiency). Unless you have a 182 craving, there are enough people who DO to price you out of the market. Piper Cherokee Piper Dakota I have a Comanche, so of course I'd consider that. You can get an older one in your budget. If your goal is to teach your wife (and kids?) to fly you probably want to avoid the high performance retractable. I can do a 172 and my wife drive a Tahoe or I can buy a Mooney and we will use the city bus system. Aren't airplanes great? Well keep in mind that if you buy a 172 and a Tahoe and sell both in 5 years you'll have less money than you would if you bought a 182 and a Hyundai. The plane will hold its value, the cars will not. What is the "typical" budget needed, annually, to operate the above airplanes in the manner I want to? Insurance? Fuel? Etc? Roughly $8-10k once you factor in insurance, hangar/tiedown, maintenance, fuel, oil, engine/avionics/paint reserve (or the equivalent loss in value at resale). The important thing is that while the costs of owning may average out over several years (and after selling the plane), any one year might cost a lot more if you had to replace an engine or comply with an A/D. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#14
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Bill wrote:
I am an ATP/CFII with about 4000 hrs TT and maybe 2000 in a variety of Cessna and Piper airplanes. Current 1st class, currently flying full time. I am looking at buying: Cessna 172 Cessna 182 Piper Cherokee Piper Dakota My budget is about $50-75K or below ideally or $100K absolute max, with the latter putting my wife in a Hyundai, ourselves eating at the local soup kitchen, and living in an RV park. May I suggest that you contact the "type" clubs. They usually have very specific information about each model/year. I am a member of, and highly recommend "Cessna Pilots Association"... I think they know more about Cessnas than Cessna knows about them! I like the C182... with a 12V electrical system, the newest one you can find in your price range. The 24V ones are harder to jump. :-) Of course, I like the 1650 lbs useful load in my C206. :-) Best regards, Jer/ "Flight instruction and mountain flying are my vocation!" Eberhard -- Jer/ (Slash) Eberhard, Mountain Flying Aviation, LTD, Ft Collins, CO CELL 970 231-6325 EMAIL jer'at'frii.com WEB http://www.frii.net/~jer C-206 N9513G, CFII Airplane&Glider, FAA-DEN Aviation Safety Counselor CAP-CO Mission&Aircraft CheckPilot, BM218 HAM N0FZD, 197 Young Eagles! |
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