The Klapmeier brothers may have intended to expand the market for piston singles when they set out to develop their better mousetrap. But that is not what happened. The Cirrus SR series is arguably the single biggest reason sales of new retractable singles hit the dirt. Instead of an expanded market, it just shifted most of those buyers across, and retractable single piston airplanes are today even more of an endangered species than piston twins.
We could also mention the “lifestyle” marketing of Cirrus and a number of others which is both how they survive (extremely wealthy buyers) and simultaneously drives more people away from GA who think it’s only a playground for the uber-rich.
Cessna and Piper in their heyday were marketing to the “average Joe” even if they knew quite well that the average Joe couldn’t afford a new airplane. “Land-O-Matic” and ads for cramming four normal businessmen into a Piper and all...
I don’t think the “lifestyle” marketing of Cirrus is helping in the really big picture at all. It attracts a certain personality type and carries an air of “eliteness” that feels like any other “luxury” branding in other products, and that’s fine, but it turns off a whole lot of above average blue collar folk who don’t exactly want a wine and cheese party for their first intro to what it might be like to buy an aircraft.
To somewhat prove the point, prices on “backcountry capable” aircraft and “low and slow vintage” aircraft have remained steady and even climbed quite a bit. Owners of Cessna 185s will dump incredible amounts of money into them to go play in the dirt and camp in a tent in the middle of nowhere. Granted, Cirrus isn’t building anything for that market, but it’s a different sort of “lifestyle” than their pressed shirt marketing folks are chasing.
With pickup trucks being the hottest thing going in automotive sales for quite a while now, you’d think one of the manufacturers would think about it and market to that crowd. They’re willing to spend $70,000 ... for a freaking pickup truck. Something that can take a bit of a beating, haul crap, and still maybe have some creature comforts in the cabin.
The 182 or the 206 would be the perfect airplane to do this with, but they’ve played the “keep up with the Joneses” thing with the avionics, and made them much much heavier since the 70s with some of those creature comforts, and that was kinda the wrong direction. Think Jeep. Think I can hose it out if I track mud into it at a dirt strip. Think comfortable but utilitarian and fairly tough interior that won’t bother the passengers too much and seem spartan, but isn’t plush leather either.
I dunno. That’s my thoughts anyway. Numerous things about the Cirrus work well. Someone just needs to make the “overly comfortable Jeep”.
As an aside, an aircraft built and marketed like that could replace a lot of aging gear in the parts of the world where small singles are still used for real work, etc.
If Cessna could put out a 182 or 206 that was put on a serious diet and cut the price tag significantly down from the current heavy leather massive integrated avionics panel versions, and market those as rugged aircraft, they might find they’d sell.
This seems to be what people with too much money on their hands who fly a lot do to their Cessnas anyway. Decent avionics, fix up the old interior a bit, and then start doing stuff like slapping big nose forks and larger tires on them, STOL kits, and upping the horsepower.
And as far as the large schools go, I’m sure they’d appreciate anything that had an interior that could survive a million butts with decent avionics. Not so simple they can’t train “future airline pilots” in It, but not “luxury car like” either. They’re certainly trying to go with “tough and utilitarian” by mostly buying Piper these days...
Other problem for Cessna is drag. The airplanes are just slow unless you feed them copious amounts of fuel. But “pickup truck buyers” buy “fuel hogs” as daily drivers because of either real or perceived utilitarianism of the vehicle. But the siren song of better fuel economy is out there in pickup trucks now with massively turbocharged smaller engines, which is a phenomenon that hasn’t kept up at all in light aircraft.
If you do it in aircraft, you need to pick a combo that’ll work and last a good long while and back it with a stellar power plant warranty. Probably come up with some FADEC for simplifying operation and simultaneously keeping the hamfisted from blowing them up under warranty as well.
Anyway just thoughts. Cessna has kinda chased Cirrus and forgotten why people bought Cessnas. MOST pilots didn’t buy 210s. There are and were better “go fast” airplanes.
They’re not cheap but heck, if you want to go as slow as a 182 with similar load capability you can get the Tecnam twin and burn LESS fuel running TWO engines as a T182T.
So, Cessna needs to figure out something. Something to be better at than Cirrus and Piper that the other two simply can’t do with their designs, and maximize it.
Buying Lanceair was the wrong market. The Skycatcher was also the wrong market. Look at what Cessna owners buy, drive, and do, Cessna.