Afterburner Blowout
Filing Flight Plan
The Beech Musketeer looks just about perfect. Glad to see a positive review!
Not disagreeing with you, but the economics mount up against you. And also, with low hours per year, you are looking at possibly issues with corrosion in the engine.Just a quick note: I disagree that for under 100 hrs per year you are better off renting. While from a cost only standpoint that is technically true, renting requires scheduled access to an airplane that earns its living renting to anyone everyday. Owning your own plane means unlimited access anytime without pre-scheduling your flying time. It also means you are the only one using it, so it will never be unavailable without your knowledge. Need to take the bird out-of town for a week or two? No problem!
Unlimited access and limited abusive use are two things in favor of owning that rental airplanes can't match.
As someone who has always rented and never owned, I couldn't agree more.... and I would also add to that the ability to leave your "stuff" stashed in the plane just the way you like it. It's maybe silly in the scheme of costs, but having your spare pencil where you want it, your yoke clip for your ipad set up just the way you like it, or whatever.... that all came to be a minor aggravation for me...having that cockpit organization time eat into my preflight time and paying rent to do it.Just a quick note: I disagree that for under 100 hrs per year you are better off renting. While from a cost only standpoint that is technically true, renting requires scheduled access to an airplane that earns its living renting to anyone everyday. Owning your own plane means unlimited access anytime without pre-scheduling your flying time. It also means you are the only one using it, so it will never be unavailable without your knowledge. Need to take the bird out-of town for a week or two? No problem!
Unlimited access and limited abusive use are two things in favor of owning that rental airplanes can't match.
I recommend you take your wife up for a nice, long ride in a tandem airplane. Funny! Some women don't get a thrill out of looking at the back of your head. Some even like a side-by-side so they can chat with you while watching common scenes, watch or help with the avionics and so forth. Women! What do you think about that?rv-8
Rent her a car and hand her the keys.I recommend you take your wife up for a nice, long ride in a tandem airplane. Funny! Some women don't get a thrill out of looking at the back of your head. Some even like a side-by-side so they can chat with you while watching common scenes, watch or help with the avionics and so forth. Women! What do you think about that?
Now, if she is a pilot also, she my say you can look at the back of her head.
Funny secret about women passengers. Many see airplanes as a way to see mother, visit the children, go on a nice vacation or even spend some time with you. Figuring out crosswind compensation, VFR flight altitudes, doing stall and steep turns, maybe not so much.
Mission is hard to figure out realistically in the first place, and then mission has a bad habit of creeping or changing after you get the plane. "Hey," she says. "We could have driven and then we'd have a car instead of using this ex-police car at the weird little airport."
Washington sounds like a great place to broaden out into back country flying. Then you hopefully aren't saying to yourself, "Gosh, I could be at Mach 1.2 now." Piper Tri-Pacer or Pacer, Rans S-20.
Don't forget to get checked out in gliders while you're waiting for the right airplane. OMG! That is what rudders are for, you think. But what a nice change.
Well, yeah, one can always get a new wife.Rent her a car and hand her the keys.
Well, yeah, one can always get a new wife.
Goto the airport of your choice and start networking. That’ll help ya with hangar, maintenance and local flying bud stuff.
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Didn’t fly GA again until 10 years into the airlines. This is more dangerous than the boat at night! I recommend finding a mentor.
I just bought a turbonormalized TKSed Mooney (an engineering marvel). I am very excited.Where are you in WA? A backcountry plane may be just the ticket!
I like to quote the immortal Morrie Dollahan from Kalamazoo, Michigan: "Just get yerself a Bonanza. That's what you're gonna end up with, anyway."
Probably the best advice I ever got.
I just bought a turbonormalized TKSed Mooney (an engineering marvel). I am very excited.
Hey…..I’m a fighter pilot that owns a bonanza.But that is because you were a trash hauler. The OP is a FIGHTER pilot.
You know I am teasing you Gil.
Adolph Galland said that about his Bonanza but the fighter he was comparing it to was an ME-109.Hey…..I’m a fighter pilot that owns a bonanza.
I’m also a Bonanza owner that can’t roll my eyes hard enough when Bonanza owners say “the 35/33 flies more like a fighter”.
Beat me to it.Piper?.....nah, you'll need a Boo-nan-za. View attachment 122683
When we decided to get back into GA after raising four kids and sending them to college, I looked back at our boating experience - driving out to the lake, assembling the sailboat, launching it, retrieving it, disassembling it, trailoring it back home, rinse and repeat.Beat me to it.
I don’t think I could ever go back to renting a hangar at a public airport. Airpark living is the best! Every morning at least three, sometimes as many as nine, planes head out to breakfast. We all get together a lot - often daily - and talk about planes, several A&Ps, guys who can - and have - build or fix anything, and who have some of the most diverse flying experience (international heavy pilots, fighter pilots, ultralight and gyrocopter guys, one kitbuilder who soloed around the world twice, a Reno racer/owner, it goes on and on).When we decided to get back into GA after raising four kids and sending them to college, I looked back at our boating experience - driving out to the lake, assembling the sailboat, launching it, retrieving it, disassembling it, trailoring it back home, rinse and repeat.
We found a lot/house/hangar on an airpark and moved here. Now I just walk out the back door, open the hangar and go flying. Far better than having to drive to an airport everytime I want to fly. A side benefit is that we have multiple A&Ps here with at least two IAs.
We love it here, she has room to garden, I have room to play with airplanes (rebuilding a Woody's Pusher and working on a Tailwind).
Oh, and there is no hangar rent!
Near Boise?, I can take you for a Demo flight in this one...The Beech Musketeer looks just about perfect. Glad to see a positive review!
You mean it doesn't?Hey…..I’m a fighter pilot that owns a bonanza.
I’m also a Bonanza owner that can’t roll my eyes hard enough when Bonanza owners say “the 35/33 flies more like a fighter”.
this still avail?Near Boise?, I can take you for a Demo flight in this one...
View attachment 122874View attachment 122875
1968 BEECHCRAFT MUSKETEER B-23 • $65,900 • FOR SALE • 1968 Beechcraft Musketeer B-23. Extremely low time clean Musketeer for sale. Total Time: 1508.2! ESMOH 875.4 Lycoming 0-360 A2G 180 HP. ADSB out. Front seat shoulder harness. Clean interior and good paint. Micro vortex generators. Open to reasonable offers cash buyers only. • Contact Richard Bouge , Friend of Owner - located Boise, ID 83714 United States • Telephone: 2085711693 • Posted November 10, 2023 • Show all Ads posted by this Advertiser • Recommend This Ad to a Friend • Email Advertiser • Save to Watchlist • Report This Ad • View Larger Images
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL
this still avail?
I think so, it is still parked here and local sales flyers are still up.this still avail