MarkH
Line Up and Wait
I am looking to buy my first plane, I am a 100-hour (10 hour tailwheel) private pilot looking to build time and obtain IFR, CPL, MEL, CFI/II ratings over the next 2 years. I am hoping, in addition to these ratings to have 500-700 hours by the end of 2021. I know I will have to rent for some ops, but I am trying to minimize my overall costs while maintaining enough availability to ensure that if I want to fly, lack of rental availability does not stop me.
I am trying to decide which approach I should take, and I am considering 4 general planes at various prices, I am in a Mode C veil, so a plane with an alternator needs a transponder.
Which plane would you choose and why?
1) Full trainer - Piper Cherokee 140 $26K, with nav radio and approach gps. Downsides: Expensive ($26K), must maintain GPS database, transponder/ADSB, and burns 7 gph. Also, not tailwheel. Upside, I would only need to rent for tailwheel time and multi time.
2) Tailwheel trainer, Cessna 140 - $22K with nav radio and gyros. Downsides: Need to maintain transponder/ADSB, will need to rent for IFR training, and check rides (no DPEs I know of can fly with me under gross). Will be taking check rides in a plane I don't have most of my experience in. Tailwheel insurance costs. Advantages: Tailwheel time, low fuel use.
3)Non-electric tailwheel trainer, Champ $22K, Downside: will need to rent for all training and for night requirements. Tailwheel insurance costs. Advantages: minimal systems maintenance
4) Single-seat experimental tailwheel $10K. Downsides: Will rent need to rent for training, will need to rent for spontaneous trips with a passenger (possibly canceling those trips), still need transponder/ADSB, likely the hull is uninsurable. Advantages: Lower maintenance costs, lower operating costs, much lower acquisition cost, tailwheel time.
I am trying to decide which approach I should take, and I am considering 4 general planes at various prices, I am in a Mode C veil, so a plane with an alternator needs a transponder.
Which plane would you choose and why?
1) Full trainer - Piper Cherokee 140 $26K, with nav radio and approach gps. Downsides: Expensive ($26K), must maintain GPS database, transponder/ADSB, and burns 7 gph. Also, not tailwheel. Upside, I would only need to rent for tailwheel time and multi time.
2) Tailwheel trainer, Cessna 140 - $22K with nav radio and gyros. Downsides: Need to maintain transponder/ADSB, will need to rent for IFR training, and check rides (no DPEs I know of can fly with me under gross). Will be taking check rides in a plane I don't have most of my experience in. Tailwheel insurance costs. Advantages: Tailwheel time, low fuel use.
3)Non-electric tailwheel trainer, Champ $22K, Downside: will need to rent for all training and for night requirements. Tailwheel insurance costs. Advantages: minimal systems maintenance
4) Single-seat experimental tailwheel $10K. Downsides: Will rent need to rent for training, will need to rent for spontaneous trips with a passenger (possibly canceling those trips), still need transponder/ADSB, likely the hull is uninsurable. Advantages: Lower maintenance costs, lower operating costs, much lower acquisition cost, tailwheel time.