With 60 gallons of fuel I have 676 lbs. available. That gets me 6 hours flight time (5 plus 1 hour reserve) at 165 mph.TAS. My wife and I, plus all she wants to take, can comfortably make Nashville non-stop from the Houston area.
For AngleFlights, I regularly fly with 40 gallons, two passengers, and the stuff I want to carry, plus the stuff the people carry on the missions. That’s 3 hours plus reserves, so I can comfortably make Oklahoma City from the Houston area, and 3 hours is about the most I’d want to make an AngleFlight passenger fly. My wife and I plus another couple with weekend baggage can make New Orleans with a 1 hour reserve.
That’s pretty good for a comfortable ‘4’ seater, with easy access, and that flies fast on 10 GPH or less.
The missions I’d planned while searching for a plane were 90% solo or just with my wife, 8% 3 souls on board for flights under 400 miles, 2% my wife and I plus another couple for short flights of up to 300 miles. The mission would include at least one trip a year of at least 1500 miles one way with my wife and would require single pilot IFR when needed. For single pilot IFR I wanted at least a single axis autopilot, and because the 1956 172 I started with cruised at 110 mph. I wanted the new plane to cruise at a minimum of 150 mph.
I’m 6’ 4” and average around 250 lbs. so my fitting comfortably limited my choices pretty significantly. Of the major certified planes that I could buy for less than $100,000 my size really meant I needed a Cessna. I didn’t fit in any of the other singles I checked out except a Mooney and the Mooney was too narrow for my wife and I to fly side be side comfortably.
The Cardinal RG ticks all the boxes I listed.
Gary