tawood
En-Route
Haven't posted here in a few years (been busy with a new business after retiring from my old job). Just sold my '66 Piper Cherokee, and the market really is INSANE, so I thought I'd share my experience.
First a little background. I bought the plane 5 years ago, and I paid a premium because it was low hours on airframe / engine, and a very clean, well-taken-care-of aircraft. When I bough it, it was the highest priced Cherokee 140 I had ever come across (well, except for Van Bortel Cherokees!). After seeing it, I didn't even try to undercut the price...some might of said I overpaid. This was the 6th plane I've owned in my 25 years of flying, so I'm not a stranger to the buy/sell process.
My girlfriend Kristine and I put hundreds of hours on the plane in the 5 years we had it, flying it all over the country and me getting my instrument rating. I didn't really upgrade anything on it other than normal maintenance and added a SkyBeacon. Never really had problems either, other than once having a carb issue that resulted in a new carb (my most expensive repair). It was IFR certified but with the only gps an old non-updateable VFR gps. Upon putting it up for sale, engine was halfway to TBO, paint had a couple of new minor scratches but otherwise good, and tires were ok.
I listed it at 150% more than I paid 5 years ago (which seemed way too high to me), and as I listed it, it was the second highest priced Cherokee (140/150/160) on trade-a-plane. I hit "enter" on my computer to complete the listing at 10pm at night, and immediately my phone started ringing--no joke! I mean IMMMEDIATELY! I received 3 phone calls OVERNIGHT after I went to bed! The first call I answered, in the morning (7am), was a gentleman in Kentucky who said, "I'll wire you the money right now, sight unseen." He came and got it two days later. No pre-buy, no viewing in person before hand, nothing. Total time I spent on the sale with him was maybe 30 minutes tops before I handed him the keys.
In the 3 days the ad was active, I received well over 200 calls/emails/messages. I got offers to wire me 150% over ASKING PRICE, sight unseen, if I'd just end the original sale and sell to them instead!
Its been about a month now since I sold it. Money was good, has been in my bank account since putting the plane for sale, and the buyer was a very nice guy from a couple of states away. Those that know me know I worked many years as a financial crimes detective, so I did my due diligence with the way this plane was sold, on both the money and the buyer. All is good.
If my sale sounds awesome there is a downside...a major downside: I sold only to upgrade. Now I get to enter this crazy market as a buyer. Speaking of which, my hangar neighbor mentioned Oliver and Martina might be selling their Mooney... @German guy @Skywalker if there's any truth to that I may be interested.
Kristine REALLY likes having a plane, but I'm trying to get her to wait things out a bit. This can't last forever or even much longer for that matter (although right before posting, I searched and found a thread from a year ago here where numerous posters were saying the prices were about to crash any second). Guess we'll see...
First a little background. I bought the plane 5 years ago, and I paid a premium because it was low hours on airframe / engine, and a very clean, well-taken-care-of aircraft. When I bough it, it was the highest priced Cherokee 140 I had ever come across (well, except for Van Bortel Cherokees!). After seeing it, I didn't even try to undercut the price...some might of said I overpaid. This was the 6th plane I've owned in my 25 years of flying, so I'm not a stranger to the buy/sell process.
My girlfriend Kristine and I put hundreds of hours on the plane in the 5 years we had it, flying it all over the country and me getting my instrument rating. I didn't really upgrade anything on it other than normal maintenance and added a SkyBeacon. Never really had problems either, other than once having a carb issue that resulted in a new carb (my most expensive repair). It was IFR certified but with the only gps an old non-updateable VFR gps. Upon putting it up for sale, engine was halfway to TBO, paint had a couple of new minor scratches but otherwise good, and tires were ok.
I listed it at 150% more than I paid 5 years ago (which seemed way too high to me), and as I listed it, it was the second highest priced Cherokee (140/150/160) on trade-a-plane. I hit "enter" on my computer to complete the listing at 10pm at night, and immediately my phone started ringing--no joke! I mean IMMMEDIATELY! I received 3 phone calls OVERNIGHT after I went to bed! The first call I answered, in the morning (7am), was a gentleman in Kentucky who said, "I'll wire you the money right now, sight unseen." He came and got it two days later. No pre-buy, no viewing in person before hand, nothing. Total time I spent on the sale with him was maybe 30 minutes tops before I handed him the keys.
In the 3 days the ad was active, I received well over 200 calls/emails/messages. I got offers to wire me 150% over ASKING PRICE, sight unseen, if I'd just end the original sale and sell to them instead!
Its been about a month now since I sold it. Money was good, has been in my bank account since putting the plane for sale, and the buyer was a very nice guy from a couple of states away. Those that know me know I worked many years as a financial crimes detective, so I did my due diligence with the way this plane was sold, on both the money and the buyer. All is good.
If my sale sounds awesome there is a downside...a major downside: I sold only to upgrade. Now I get to enter this crazy market as a buyer. Speaking of which, my hangar neighbor mentioned Oliver and Martina might be selling their Mooney... @German guy @Skywalker if there's any truth to that I may be interested.
Kristine REALLY likes having a plane, but I'm trying to get her to wait things out a bit. This can't last forever or even much longer for that matter (although right before posting, I searched and found a thread from a year ago here where numerous posters were saying the prices were about to crash any second). Guess we'll see...
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