I’ll just start with an outrageous comment, since it’s the internet...
If you’re going to cram yourself into something narrow and uncomfortable to go fast, the answer is Aerostar.
Hahaha. With the comedy out of the way...
For that price, I wouldn’t buy one. Even if I had that kind of cash lying around. There’s still just too many older airframes that perform as well for deeply depreciated prices. And many are well-maintained and no hoopties, but even many of the hoopties are in a condition where a complete recondition could be done for HALF of the price of new.
This is the real problem with modern new aircraft sales. They’re competing for the top of the market.
Now in the case of Mooney one has to ask, “What does Mooney offer in the ownership experience for these top of the food chain clients that Cirrus doesn’t?” And that’s where they fall on their face.
I agree with someone else who said they shouldn’t have stopped their lower end product. They’re going to need it. They need a plan to do marketing and hype as well as Cirrus and get people “addicted to Mooney” at a lower price point early in their Aviation lifestyle. And that’s what Cirrus does well, they sell Cirrus as a lifestyle.
I’m not saying anything about pilot training or the aircraft themselves, I’m strictly talking Marketing and Sales here.
Piper also has problems in this regard but they get the FLEET sales to the big flight schools. As does Cessna. Mooney has no appropriate fleet aircraft. Even the Cirrus got chosen for fleet sales to USAF indirectly via a contractor. Mooney needs fleet sales to survive as anything other than a niche player.
That or wild popularity. (Think Cub Crafters or Carbon Cub type stuff...)
I really enjoyed flying the M20C I had access to long ago. It was uncomfortable, small, and you “wore” it, but it was fast and efficient and cheap. I mean really cheap. It essentially rented for Skyhawk rates and went faster. I took it on a number of longer trips. Yeah, in reality I only got there an hour earlier after a full day of flying, if that, but I did it at prices that rivaled the Skyhawk.
If I had continued to fly that airplane for years (the club was disbanded for non-fiscal reasons) I would be a much bigger Mooney fan now. Familiarity and time in type is a big deal in future purchase decisions. I may have even not bought into a 182 co-ownership.
Mooney needs an “entry level traveler” if they really want to make a comeback.
ROFL. The insider stuff in this biz and especially Aviation journalism is wildly entertaining. To me anyway. Since I work far far away from it for my day job.
I laughed at his intro...
“Even if you’ve never been here ... you’ll recognize it...”
Uhh... no Paul. I wouldn’t. Hahaha.
He’s usually more careful than that in his script writing.
I liked the mixed performance chart.
As an aside I think the Bo belongs in this category as a comparison also but I get why they left it off calling it a six seater. Nobody I’ve ever met flies them six-up though. Not happening very often, but it directly competes in the business traveler market the Cirrus and Mooney are in.
Plus, it’s PoA. The answer to everything is “Bo”, right?
LOL.
I’d like to see the Bo added to his chart.
Not that it matters for me really, I’m not playing in that price point. Probably ever. I’ve got a decent retirement nest egg started for a 40-something and no debt, so I can continue to fund it and afford to fly, but one of those aircraft would wipe it out. They’re ludicrous prices without a business need. Even then, very hard to cost-justify.
Unless as
@flyingcheesehead recommends, one lives in the airplane and sells the house, since only one is flyable.