As I said, my flagship mission trip is 416NM. Currently being accomplished in a PA-28-161 with durations between 3.5 and 4.5
Agreed. Hence the "abstain" ballot.
One time I did do it in 3.0 but that was me pulling a Christopher Columbus and getting on a 50kt tailwind at 14 err...11.5k going east. It was fun pretending I was rich for an hour watching the 89B read
163KGTS.
I think that's the magic TAS number for your trips.
Three times a month can get somewhat painful.
Three times a year would be almost as bad.
And I do launch IFR on that too.
Yep. Gotta be IFR capable to make those trips with any degree of predictability and comfort.
I need to beat 13NMPG in order to be able to upgrade out of the warrior. The two seaters spam cans do it, but they don't have the legs for it non-stop which kills the block time.
What you really need is an annual budget using miles flown as the constant.
I took into consideration the points my buddy made as well as Hennings argument over the perceived expenses of the gear.
You're overly fixated on individual line-items in the MX budget. Even if you have a gear problem, or a turbo problem or a mag problem or whatever else, you won't have it
every year. But you will have
something every year, so developing a reasonable MX budget is essential for meaningful comparisons.
Doing further research online and understanding these things were fundamentally made as commercial complex trainer, gap-fillers much like the wonky 172RG, I'm still too gunshy to undertake the pop-up expenses of swing gear, particularly when it comes to first year annual.
The fixation continues . . .
Sure, a thorough pre-buy would help with that, but in my experience pre-buys also are a crapshoot. The piper owner site is riddled with threads upon threads of anecdotes and questions that essentially cast a very different picture of the complexity, hassle and expense of the swing gear.
But at least you're consistent. :wink2:
I think the safe bet for me is to accept the purchase of a retract as a bona fide basket case if I do ever go that route and adjust the buy offer accordingly to account for taking it in the shorts the first year.
And just when I thought you were through beating the dead horse, you gave him one more good whack.
Though I completely agree I need not the fuel burn nor the useful load of the 235, I suspect that even with cylinder work required at first annual, the mx expenses of the 235 would come well under that of an Arrow.
More line-item fixation.
I dare say probably in line with that of my warrior minus the prop.
How many line items are left to go on the annual checklist?
I agree though, it's a hell of an inefficient way of gaining 45 minutes on each leg by going big engine on the "mission". Upgrading to a measely 20hp more is not cost effective. The archer makes absolute zero dent on my mission and sinks me 20 grand in the hole for less efficiency.
This is why you need a budget rather than a laundry list of potential MX issues.
Maybe a Mooney manual gear sample? Shotgun panel (non-sixpack panel, huge pet peeve of mine),
A shop in Denton will rebuild the panel using precision CAD cutter for $2,500. Chump change if everything else suits your fancy.
gear donuts neglected, prop hub cracking fatigue ADs and the whole steel tubular construction and 50 years of corrosion potential just makes me feel safe and cozy in my predictable warrior.
Assumes facts not in evidence. Every breed has its share of ugs.
Grumman Tiger? RVs? Glasairs? Sure. That's probably where the answer lies.
Could be, but at this point you're drawing bullseyes around the bullet holes.
But they're going for a lot more and they are RARE. Even the cheetahs people are asking RV money for them. Meh.
What's the real difference in all-in cost over a year? 5 years?
Inventory was one of my motivators for staying in the Piper line. It's the reason I was able to acquire the warrior as readily as I did.
Every financial analysis should include an eventual sale of the asset. Are the more desirable higher-priced planes selling for a higher percentage of purchase price than the Indians?
I've even thought going down the scale on the samples, to a AA-1 with the -320. But now my range goes to hell, even with the tank augmentation STC.
An excellent reason for discarding them from the prospect list.
So perhaps I agree. NONE seems to be the answer for this particular mission set. I'm kinda stuck with a warrior for the time being. I'll keep looking at options. 4.0 block times still beats the nine hour drive and doing it commercially takes just as long as driving since both my origin and destination are non-hubs.
You've done a lot of good research and sound thinking. The assignment now is to step back from the details and develop a consistent method of side-by-side comparison.
It has been an eye-opening discussion for sure. I've learned a lot about airplanes I've only rented or instructed in but never actually owned. It's a love hate relationship I have with the warrior. Single door shenanigans and 4 hours hand flying per leg gets irritating, but the second I look up I realize, I'm stealing every time I go up compared to the variables introduced by the upgrades we've discussed. The thing hasn't let me down yet. Dispatch rate is still 90% (annual bumped it down) in 6 months and 165 hours flown to date. That's incredible for these effin things.