..any plane, if flown competently, can "do it all" .. depending on how you define "all"
I love your videos and you have a nice rig that does its mission well. But for 90% (or more?) pilots that mission really doesn't fit their need. It's like if we all drove Jeeps, even though most people never leave the road. The Jeep, for all intents and purposes, is an impractical uncomfortable vehicle (no personal hate, I drive something comparable, equally impractical)
I recently flew quite possibly one of the nicest 182RG out there. Owners spare no expense, all the best avionics (G500, GTN, etc), everything you can imagine. And guess what. I really wanted to like the plane. I'll be flying it to Oshkosh after all (since no one else has a multi and I'm not interested in fronting the Aztec bill!).. But all the things I hate about the flight school 172 is right there on this 182.. in just a slightly heavier version
-slow (I got critiqued for saying the Aztec is "fast" in another forum. The 182 (even the RG) is demonstrably slower)
-fuel hog
-not responsive on the controls
-blocks all meaningful visibility except for "straight down next to you"
-pain to fuel
-wobbly on the ground
-not unique and lacks any kind of aesthetic appeal
-trim wheel in dumb spot
-constant rudder pressure that's hard to trim away
-a tube for an air vent that's either a blizzard in the cockpit or off
-the useful load isn't all that great.. "only plane you can fill the tanks and the cabin" - total BS. Best case scenario you have 1,200 lbs useful. Toss 80 gallons in there and you better hope you and your friends are in shape (180 lbs or less), fly naked, and don't wear headsets and the plane is otherwise empty
-most planes fly better the faster they go.. even the "it shouldn't fly it's so bulbous Aztec" but the 182 just feels like it suffers its way through the flight envelope. Get a PA28 into the yellow arc and the thing is downright sporty! The same can't be said for the 172/182.. feels like your bending metal with constantly changing trim needs and a gradual loss of harmony in the controls
Mooney, Comanche, there are a few planes that come close. There's a somewhat ugly amphib out there that also comes close.. Seawind 300
182s are celebrated on these forums. I don’t see the draw.
I flat out hate them. The fact that everyone loves them makes me hate them more. I can't find a singe redeemable quality. My personal (maybe mean sounding) theory..? Cessna cranked out sheer volumes of 172 for the schools and people like sticking with what they're used to.. so eventually they buy a 182. Oh and it has 2 doors, and you don't have to climb in the wing to get in. So the Mrs prefers that over the PA28. So you learn in a 172, and then eventually buy a 182. Not realizing there are planes that carry more, fly faster, burn less gas, or some combination of all three. To this point, I also don't get the Bonanza obsession. Narrow cabin and in most cases not that fast. Older ones have a huge bar in the cockpit blocking all useful switches and dubious flap/gear handles. BUT, they do fly extremely nice. In my last 17 years of flying experience any Bonanza I've flown (even very beater Debonair rentals) fly **superbly** well. The folks at Beech certainly knew what they were doing!!
Well you're going to get a million answers but on production numbers the C-172(and 182) is it. Still in production, still high demand.
By this logic the Toyota Corolla is the best car ever and China (by population) is the best place to live
**Maybe a better way to look at this
-who has the most passionate / obsessed owners? I would say that goes to the Mooney crowd
.. flying is after all 99% romance driven. People will justify their plane as the best plane through whatever confirmation bias they want. All the 172, 182, SR22, Mooney, Bonanza, etc., folks will say theirs is the best