Mr.T
Pre-Flight
So I'm thinking I might like to buy a plane sometime in the next year and starting to look around at what's on the market. My mission is cross-country flying, VFR and "light" IFR (no hard IMC and low approaches, at least not for a while...), as fast as possible, typically with only one or 2 passengers. I also need at least a Garmin 430W and really want a 2-axis, approach-coupled autopilot. I'm willing to deal with ADS-B as a separate issue, so it doesn't matter if the plane is already equipped for 2020 or not.
My price range is something under $75k (or probably less once the wife gets wind of my plans...) At the moment, I've been looking primarily at the Mooney M20, which seems to offer a lot of bang for the buck. But I'm not opposed to other platforms.
Looking at the market, I'm seeing lots of M20s with low to mid-time engines and "antique" avionics stacks, priced well below my price range (like in the $45-55k range), and others that are similarly priced, having a workable avionics stack, sometimes a good autopilot, but a ~1500 hour engine (or more). And of course, there are plenty at the top end of my budget that have either a good engine or good avionics but none seem to have both.
So how does one decide between engine and avionics? Is it cost prohibitive to buy a plane with a low-time engine and then rework the avionics stack and/or add an autopilot? It seems like I'd rather find the avionics I want and live with an engine that may only have 500 hours of life left than buy a plane that doesn't have the avionics and a/p I want and try to dig up the extra cash to re-fit it.
My price range is something under $75k (or probably less once the wife gets wind of my plans...) At the moment, I've been looking primarily at the Mooney M20, which seems to offer a lot of bang for the buck. But I'm not opposed to other platforms.
Looking at the market, I'm seeing lots of M20s with low to mid-time engines and "antique" avionics stacks, priced well below my price range (like in the $45-55k range), and others that are similarly priced, having a workable avionics stack, sometimes a good autopilot, but a ~1500 hour engine (or more). And of course, there are plenty at the top end of my budget that have either a good engine or good avionics but none seem to have both.
So how does one decide between engine and avionics? Is it cost prohibitive to buy a plane with a low-time engine and then rework the avionics stack and/or add an autopilot? It seems like I'd rather find the avionics I want and live with an engine that may only have 500 hours of life left than buy a plane that doesn't have the avionics and a/p I want and try to dig up the extra cash to re-fit it.