"E" model Mooney. An "F" is within a couple knots if you want more room.I guy can dream, can't he?
You do have to be a little picky looking at twins, but I did find one that I bought for 55k. Mid-time engines, round dials with a 430 w and s-tech 30, gpss, alt hold autopilot. Admittedly, it was like catching lightning in a bottle, but if you can get them insured, twins are an excellent value.Yeah darn near any twin with no avionics or AP can fit this bill.
Singles, I'd be looking at anything oddball with at least 250hp -- Comanches and Navions and Super Vikings, or super high time
For example:
https://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/152379857/1989-beechcraft-f33a-bonanza
most performance cars made in the past decade will hit 170+ pretty easily. Don't need a GT350 lolI think a used GT350 might get close
"Highway miles"Approx. 27,800 TTAF
Yeah? Like what?Plenty of EABs on the market fit that criteria.
Yeah? Like what?
I was in this position in 2014 and the only thing that could come anywhere near was a beater RV-4 with O-360. Fortunately for me, I'm 6'5" and I cannot fit into the -4.
Trust me, I would not be flying this stupid Mooney if EAB 150k for 50k existed outside of Internet forums.
Approx. 27,800 TTAF
https://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/152379857/1989-beechcraft-f33a-bonanza
I have to wonder just what too much time is for a piston plane. Especially one used as a trainer.
If you're leaning toward boxy, the BD-4 will also do the trick.
This is one of a bunch of F33As operated by Lufthansa at KGYR. They’re being replaced with Cirri now.https://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/152379857/1989-beechcraft-f33a-bonanza
I have to wonder just what too much time is for a piston plane. Especially one used as a trainer.
most performance cars made in the past decade will hit 170+ pretty easily. Don't need a GT350 lol
M20E making 150 knots? LOL
An M20J can do that, but not E
Well, okay. Truth to be told, my M20E can do 150... on 2700 rpms. If you want to fly like that, be my guest.
Those airline trainers (Lufthansa and JAL are the ones I know who used Debs) were actually fantastically maintained. There is at least one out there with 40K on the airframe that I know of.
It's just metal and maintenance. The logbooks will tell the tale. Problem is, you'll need a month to get through them all
I'd fly it.
Well, the OP has not stated he's 6'5", so a beater RV-6/6a, or glasair 1 would both fit the 150ktas bill under 50K. I'm personally going -6a and almost pulled the trigger last year on one around 45K. They might not be most people's go-to choice, but they do exist.
lol... I'm 6'4".
Its funny, I've been looking around for a faster plane than my 172, but the value in selling my 172/buying a faster plane with equivalent avionics doesn't really seem to be there. 182s are crazy expensive with 1960's avionics, all experimentals are two-seaters... A M20e or f seems like a viable solution. That Lancair is pretty sweet, but the home-drome is 2100' with trees. Hangars at the next closest airfield (KPSM) are almost $double/month. And I don't know if I'd be able to keep the junk in a hangar at PSM that I have in mine now since they went and got all TSA'd.
I consider myself pretty luck to even have a 172, and it does get me where I'm going. But another 30kts would be so much better.
. A M20e or f seems like a viable solution.
I consider myself pretty luck to even have a 172, and it does get me where I'm going. But another 30kts would be so much better.
If any back country flying is on the menu, the Mooney isn't going to do it for you.
A M20e or f seems like a viable solution. That Lancair is pretty sweet, but the home-drome is 2100' with trees. Hangars at the next closest airfield (KPSM) are almost $double/month. And I don't know if I'd be able to keep the junk in a hangar at PSM that I have in mine now since they went and got all TSA'd.
I consider myself pretty luck to even have a 172, and it does get me where I'm going. But another 30kts would be so much better.
I've landed my Mooney on grass, and I know some guys based on grass. The prop clearance on the Mooney is an inch or two less, but it really isn't that much.
Yeah. I was thinking about nicely manicured turf strips, not landing in the snazz in the backcountry. If the bumps are doing a number on the tanks you get bladders. No more tank worries.IMHO the real issue with off-roading a Mooney is the lack of proper gear suspension and the real effect runway bumps are having on the fuel tanks. Also, the wheelbase is very short, so it tips and dives a lot, eating into the prop clearance that notionally would be sufficient. Finally, the wingspan is too great and wings are too close to the ground. That last one is not a big issue on runway, but it's an annoying problem when taxiing and parking at remote airstrips.
A smooth grass runway is of course not a problem. I wanted to buy a house at a local airpark with a grass runway, and they already had a resident with a Mooney. My own Mooney lived at a grass runway near Dallas for a few years.