I'll get on my soapbox for one thing: does it have shoulder harnesses (at least for the front seats)? If not, look into adding them ASAP. When we bought ours, it didn't have them. One of my partners wanted to put them in, but we drug out feet on it. I started to read up on all the accidents that have happened where the occupants may have been saved (or much less injured) had there been harnesses. So we finally put in 3-point ones. Cost was about $450 for the parts, and about 1 hour of labor. Many of the early Vikings already have the attach points welded in place on the frame between the pilot's window and the back window. Assuming you have them, it's a very easy install.
Hey Evil - re: your sig - isn't your caret speed somewhere around 450-470ktas?My buddy has a Turbo Viking he's looking to sell. PM me if anyone wants his info.
Your carrier will require a checkout from a Viking experienced instructor. . .
One bit of advice - after owning one for 2 plus years. Every single landing needs to at stall. Or else.
You want a sobering review, search for "Viking Left Off runway" - there is a lot of them.
Mine was metal fatigue in the steering rod at the knuckle. . . . yours may be something else.
I've got 350 hours in a Viking- prob one of the more high time guys today! Some of it in the flight levels in my Turbo . .In my experience, "Viking experienced" is pretty loose as far as the insurance carriers go. There are 5 of us in my partnership, 2 of us being CFIs. The underwriter approved a local CFI who had flown a Viking a few hours 10-15 years ago to check me out in the airplane (3 hours including an IPC). Once I was checked out with my 3 hours, the underwriter was fine with me checking out the other guys. So you may not necessarily need to hunt down a CFI with tons of Viking time (those guys are hard to find).
One bit of advice - after owning one for 2 plus years. Every single landing needs to at stall. Or else.
You want a sobering review, search for "Viking Left Off runway" - there is a lot of them.
That Bellanca ended up BACK in my hangar at KHSD in Jan of 2017~~ it was a joyful reunion, I had sold it in 2005 during an extremely busy time in my career, and when I saw it come across my Barnstormers feed I couldn't believe my eyes.... It truly was a brand new airplane, minus the engine proper. Newly skinned and painted, all new hoses and rebuilt fuel system, interior was still a 9 that we installed back in 2003. They are truly a delight to fly, and the closest thing to a P-51 airfoil in a GA aircraft. Cheapest transportation available to Colorado from OK~~!Any reason you're looking at the '74 and newer models? Guy out in Enid, OK had a beautiful '71 turbo model that was recovered around 2010 I think. He was asking $45K, but I think the engine was getting up toward TBO.
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I just did a double-take on your purchase, because we sold our Super Viking like...a year ago? Something like that. And when you posted pics of your new acquisition, it looked an awful lot like mine, N# and all. Closer look showed our N#s are one digit different. Enjoy the new plane. Super Vikings are different and interesting and zippy and maneuverable.