Here is the situation. I am in the market for a family plane to haul my wife and young kid around to destinations 450 nautical miles and below. My home field is 2400’ of grass and is at 500’ msl, in the summer we see density altitudes of 3300’ max.
I have been shopping for 182s but they are selling for crack prices even with worn out engines and junk avionics, I am now looking at the Cherokee 180 and 235 but the extra fuel and overhaul cost of that O540 are putting me off so by default I am shopping for a Cherokee 180 but boy are they slow.
I have read online that the Grumman tigers are not well-suited to grass or short runways but the book value on distance required to clear a 50 foot obstacle is quite similar to a piper archer or even a Cherokee 180 so where do they get that reputation from and how accurate is it?
i like the speed and visibility of the Grumman but obviously if I can’t safely operate at home base there is no point.
we have an archer and Cherokee 180 at our field and they do fine all summer long even loaded up with more folks than I have to haul. By using those planes as a benchmark can I assume that the tiger will perform similarly or are the real world figures substantially different than book for shorter field operations?
thx
I have been shopping for 182s but they are selling for crack prices even with worn out engines and junk avionics, I am now looking at the Cherokee 180 and 235 but the extra fuel and overhaul cost of that O540 are putting me off so by default I am shopping for a Cherokee 180 but boy are they slow.
I have read online that the Grumman tigers are not well-suited to grass or short runways but the book value on distance required to clear a 50 foot obstacle is quite similar to a piper archer or even a Cherokee 180 so where do they get that reputation from and how accurate is it?
i like the speed and visibility of the Grumman but obviously if I can’t safely operate at home base there is no point.
we have an archer and Cherokee 180 at our field and they do fine all summer long even loaded up with more folks than I have to haul. By using those planes as a benchmark can I assume that the tiger will perform similarly or are the real world figures substantially different than book for shorter field operations?
thx