So would you say the AA1 is a good starter?I owned an original AA1 and own a C150 now. If I was going somewhere the AA1 would be my choice. More comfortable in room and turbulence. It’s about 10 knots faster than my c150. For the type of flying I do now the C150 is a better fit. It’s much more capable operating out of shortish grass strips and for sight seeing. The AA1 is much easier and cheaper to maintain. AA1 has more cargo room than my fastback 150 but less than the later omnivision C150’s. Given the ever rising price of 150’s, unless you plan to do a lot of <2000’ grass strips I’d lean towards the Grumman.
So would you say the AA1 is a good starter?
What @Grum.Man said. Love mine. Outstanding in crosswind, and very sporty handling. More challenging and more fun than the traumahawks and high wings. Grumman for pavement, high wing for off road.So would you say the AA1 is a good starter?
It’s what I learned to fly in. While not hard to fly at all, it’s not as easy as the 150. The only time it’s easier is when the wind picks up. It’s the cheapest way to get into flying short of an ultralight.
I’m not planning on doing much grass field takeoffs. My other concern is that I will be doing a lot of traveling back and forth from South Carolina and Texas and I just need something reliable that’s not too crazy expensiveWhat @Grum.Man said. Love mine. Outstanding in crosswind, and very sporty handling. More challenging and more fun than the traumahawks and high wings. Grumman for pavement, high wing for off road.
Kinda done that trip. (WV to TX). Super fun weekend. This was over West Virginia. One of these days I’ll do the 150 hp STC and take her to the real mountains out west. That said, I’m in the baby steps of a 240hp Bearhawk build for serious mountain flying.I’m not planning on doing much grass field takeoffs. My other concern is that I will be doing a lot of traveling back and forth from South Carolina and Texas and I just need something reliable that’s not too crazy expensive
For Texas when the temps start off the day in the 90's and go up from there, you'll quickly come to appreciate something with a 180 horse engine.I’m not planning on doing much grass field takeoffs. My other concern is that I will be doing a lot of traveling back and forth from South Carolina and Texas and I just need something reliable that’s not too crazy expensive
It's a sharper stall than a C-150 or a Cherokee (which is more a mush than a stall), but definitely straightforward. I instructed primary students in early AA-1s, including s/n 7, the first Yankee on the West Coast. I preferred it to our Cherokees as a trainer, especially for students intending to move up to higher-performance airplanes.Before this rumor starts again let’s be perfectly clear, the AA1 has a very tame stall. While a 150 will not really stall without doing something to really upset it an AA1 does. The nose drops straight ahead and it starts flying again as soon as it reaches a level flight attitude.
Travel and AA1 do not belong in the same sentence.
I ferried an AA1B from Florida to the NE one time years ago. Headwinds had me at highway speeds. Had to keep stopping for fuel.