Ben Anderson
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2020
- Messages
- 60
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gringopilot
So I've been hunting for a plane for months now and I'm down to these. My mental debate right now is operating costs. The vintage Mooney M20 C or E with the manual johnson bar gear and constant speed prop...how much more do these factors add in maintenance costs versus a fixed gear Grumman Tiger without the cs prop?
Also, any insights into the M20C and E differences. Both planes I found have mid time engines, both have the manual gear, both seem well cared for. The E the local avionics guy told me it is an excellently maintained plane. It looked meticulously beautiful. Great paint. The only downside is the guy wants a fair bit for it and the panel has a 430 WAAS (nothing newer) and is a shotgun panel - not standard 6 pack...the owner doesn't fly IFR hardly at all and I plan to quite a bit - owner suggested I add a G5 if it's an issue. The M20C has slightly older paint job, but a superior panel. It has the Garmin Audio 345, Garmin GPS 355 WAAS and a standard 6 pack - ADS B IN/OUT. Both of these are priced exactly the same. The E model has fuel bladders, the C model was stripped and sealed in 2011. I am also concerned about the differences between the O 360 and the IO 360. I've heard the fuel injected you get better GPH, but that it is more expensive to overhaul and can hit overhaul sooner, whereas the bulletproof O 360 can often go past TBO and cost less to overhaul. What price difference for the overhauls? The E sounds like it gets about 155 knots versus 140/145 knots on the C but I really don't care that much about that sort of difference.
I did find a Grumman for mid 40s but EVERYTHING is outdated. Low engine hours (400) not flown much last few years but it's like original radios, VORS, everything. I'm thinking $20k probably to upgrade to a GPS WAAS and get an indicator and ADS B out/in transponder.
Any insights appreciated. I'm looking mostly to time build but can pay cash for the plane though ongoing costs are my biggest concern long term. My wife also really doesn't like turbulence and the Tigers seem "tinny?", small? The Mooneys just look like they'd be able to handle rough weather better they look like real planes. Don't be offended Tiger owners they just always look like thin metal or cheap to me. Though I do like to save money and they sound cheap to maintain.
Thanks everyone, getting close, getting excited, already have a hangar lined up!
-Ben
Also, any insights into the M20C and E differences. Both planes I found have mid time engines, both have the manual gear, both seem well cared for. The E the local avionics guy told me it is an excellently maintained plane. It looked meticulously beautiful. Great paint. The only downside is the guy wants a fair bit for it and the panel has a 430 WAAS (nothing newer) and is a shotgun panel - not standard 6 pack...the owner doesn't fly IFR hardly at all and I plan to quite a bit - owner suggested I add a G5 if it's an issue. The M20C has slightly older paint job, but a superior panel. It has the Garmin Audio 345, Garmin GPS 355 WAAS and a standard 6 pack - ADS B IN/OUT. Both of these are priced exactly the same. The E model has fuel bladders, the C model was stripped and sealed in 2011. I am also concerned about the differences between the O 360 and the IO 360. I've heard the fuel injected you get better GPH, but that it is more expensive to overhaul and can hit overhaul sooner, whereas the bulletproof O 360 can often go past TBO and cost less to overhaul. What price difference for the overhauls? The E sounds like it gets about 155 knots versus 140/145 knots on the C but I really don't care that much about that sort of difference.
I did find a Grumman for mid 40s but EVERYTHING is outdated. Low engine hours (400) not flown much last few years but it's like original radios, VORS, everything. I'm thinking $20k probably to upgrade to a GPS WAAS and get an indicator and ADS B out/in transponder.
Any insights appreciated. I'm looking mostly to time build but can pay cash for the plane though ongoing costs are my biggest concern long term. My wife also really doesn't like turbulence and the Tigers seem "tinny?", small? The Mooneys just look like they'd be able to handle rough weather better they look like real planes. Don't be offended Tiger owners they just always look like thin metal or cheap to me. Though I do like to save money and they sound cheap to maintain.
Thanks everyone, getting close, getting excited, already have a hangar lined up!
-Ben