mscard88
Touchdown! Greaser!
Wow!
$75K for a 2 seat 40 year old Skipper! No way, don't care what kind of avionics it has.
Wow!
$75K for a 2 seat 40 year old Skipper! No way, don't care what kind of avionics it has.
Why not just pull the avionics out, sell them separately and then sell the plane for less than half that. I agree..that's just crazy.
Don't know if someone else posted it, but you can also spend $200K for a 41 year old 172:
http://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/1343271/1976-cessna-172m-skyhawk
The plane looks like it has a G500, Aspen, GTN750/GTN650 and prolly a wine cellar
It's not really a starving student issue. Is more of an unanticipated and unprepared for problem with negotiables. Seems like I fly 10 hours, spend $2k in MX over and over since stepping up to a 6 place. If I didn't need 5 seats, it'd sell it and buy an RV.
I think if you have an airplane you have to learn how to fix it and find a friendly mechanic to save money and not just drop it off at some FBO and say fix it and pay the bill, who nitpicks everything to run the bill up, that is how I have managed to have my airplanes for so many years, and buy an airplane that meets your needs and is not going to break the bank.
Looks like some pre-buy things were missed (how old were the mags?) First year or two is going to be catch-up maintenance. It'll get better. But general advice is buy at a price that leaves maybe 10% in the acquisition budget to fix things.A lot of things keep popping up. Both in board tanks leaking, gear wouldn't retract, mag overhaul, electric trim broke, and some options such as new transponder, New audio panel, and have a SAM in the box waiting for installation.
I think that is very rare these days unless you live away for the population centers.... owner assist with a good old school AP will put you miles ahead.
I think that is very rare these days unless you live away for the population centers.
You have to take the value of your own time into account. Haven't found any AP yet that gladly suffers having an amateur in the shop, generally slowing them down.?
It's how I've always done it, even when I lived near a big city.
Keep in mind airplane are built to travel, sometime taking a few days and a 1.5hr flight to a food wrench is worth it's weight in gold.
You have to take the value of your own time into account. Haven't found any AP yet that gladly suffers having an amateur in the shop, generally slowing them down.
Re-read my first sentence: "You have to take the value of your own time into account."I guess in major cities it wouldn't be uncommon to find someone who's never held a screw driver before, but for most folks they can remove inspection panels and such just as fast as any APIA
Also most folks smart enough to get a PPL can grease a bearing or change a tire just as fast after they are shown once.
I don't know of many high time pilots who don't get invloved with their personal planes annuals.
Yeah I guess one could do that with the Skipper. I think there was a thread or something awhile back on that loaded C172 on POA.
Re-read my first sentence: "You have to take the value of your own time into account."
Being "involved" doesn't necessarily mean personally turning screws.
You must have a lot of free time.You and I have a different meaning to the word involved I guess.
But I can promise you having my APIA do my annual himself, vs with me running around pulling panels off and the installing, dropping the cowl, pulling plugs whiles he's inspecting the wings, putting plates back on as he's compression testing, that saves time. Ofcourse YMMV
You must have a lot of free time.
It's a 1978 airplane with 1500hrs on the engine which was last overhauled in 1983.
I had this conversation about low usage being bad for the engine with the guy that did the annual last week. He didn't seem to think it was a concern when I asked about it. Only place I've ever seen talk about it being bad is on here actually.
Re-read my first sentence: "You have to take the value of your own time into account."
Being "involved" doesn't necessarily mean personally turning screws.
Why not just pull the avionics out, sell them separately and then sell the plane for less than half that. I agree..that's just crazy.
Don't know if someone else posted it, but you can also spend $200K for a 41 year old 172:
http://www.controller.com/listings/aircraft/for-sale/1343271/1976-cessna-172m-skyhawk
The plane looks like it has a G500, Aspen, GTN750/GTN650 and prolly a wine cellar
Yeah, about 2-3 days a year for the annual, it's a major commitment lol
...for a plane I trust my life to, and a plane I fly into places where if you have a mechanical issue, well you can't exactly just call the local FBO lol
Also it's a fun time, shoot the **** as we're working on the plane, drinks after, it's a very worth while couple days, and my mechanic and I seem to both benifit and enjoy it. Crazy huh
Nice. I've seen your airplane and wondered if it was a twin bo. Is the one tied down across the ramp from you yours too?
Nice. I've seen your airplane and wondered if it was a twin bo. Is the one tied down across the ramp from you yours too?
Avionics is that area where owner assisted doesn't help me much and the wallet can tell too!
And the shop was OK with installing an amateur-built harness?Avionics is where you can save the most with owner assist. I was quoted $400 to $1000 (4 quotes, 400 cheapest 1000 most expensive) for a wiring harness from a GX55 to CDI. It took me 45 minutes and around $40 in parts (all MIL grade stuff from Spruce, no cheap crp).
And the shop was OK with installing an amateur-built harness?
Will do. I was just there this morning with a student. Sad to see those planes rotting away.No, the rotting one is not mine. But Please feel free to come say hi if you see me out there.
Will do. I was just there this morning with a student. Sad to see those planes rotting away.
... there are title problems with that stem back to Barron Thomas.