I am based in Midwest so flying over high mountains or vast open water might be a rare mission, although flying my family to Bahamas for a vacation has been on my bucket list. Now I am leaning towards a 310 or 210 just trying to make sure I will have enough payload to carry 5 and luggage with full tank. Lance may do it depending on its useful load figure. I have not found any Saratoga that has 1500+ useful load yet ( if we all knock down 20 lbs off ourselves we may make it work as well, lol!) Again Thank you all! will keep you guys posted on what I end up with. I only got 3 months to make this happened before I lose the hanger I have been waiting for 5 years to others on the waiting list. is that crazy?
That might be a solution!!! Lol
That's a serious suggestion. Any airworthy plane should do to hold the hangar until you settle on what you want to buy. If tying up 25k in a trainer for a few months is an issue, then a pressurized piston twin may not be the right option for you.
If it were me I'd stay well away from a pressurised aircraft. Spend some time reading Richard Collins' articles. The issue with the pressurised singles is that they put you RIGHT in the weather. Because, why would you fly low if you have pressurisation? So you'll be tempted to fly FL190-FL240 and this is the most active part of the atmosphere. Plus I think you'll find that maintenance on the P210 is eyewatering.
Might not need it airworthy. Projects need hangar space, too.
For single engine, I am not sure there is any other choices but a 210 given the 1500-1600 useful load I probably need.
Richard Collins articles are mostly way off base, this is no exception. I wish people would stop pointing to what he said.
Pressurization is a tool, just like anything else on an aircraft. Why would you fly low with pressurization? Easy, because there's weather to stay out of or because the headwinds are bad. When I flew the 414 I had a number of trips I made at 6,000 MSL or less because of those factors. Once I flew from NYC to Kansas at 2,500 MSL the whole way squawking 1200 because of headwinds. It would've been slower at FL180. It was a fun trip.
What pressurization lets you do is it also lets you get above some of the weather, bumps clouds, and it's a tool that can help you stay out of icing and more easily navigate around thunderstorms in some cases. Sure, you can use it wrong, but by itself it's a great tool to have.
If it were me I'd stay well away from a pressurised aircraft. Spend some time reading Richard Collins' articles. The issue with the pressurised singles is that they put you RIGHT in the weather. Because, why would you fly low if you have pressurisation? So you'll be tempted to fly FL190-FL240 and this is the most active part of the atmosphere.
I agree that the 310R is a good option, but I suspect, as usual on POA, the correct answer is a Bonanza A36 with realistic fuel planning goals.
My $0.02
(I wish I had your problem though!)
Cessna 208? Probably around twice the useful load you have here...
it all depends on my schedule. I can fly 2-3 hours everyday if I need to. want to keep flying and stepping up on higher performance later on. got one child out of college already and close by us. I know most of time it will only carry 2 or 4, and for 5 it might be once or twice a year for family vacation. Just do not want to get a plane that only holds four or five with only 2 hours fuel in it...90% of the time a 4 or lighter 6 seater might be just fine, but certainly I do not want leave anyone out or limit my choices of destinations.More curiosity and learning experience for me.
How often do you fly now? How often do family members fly with you?
It sounds like money isn’t an issue for you, but this strikes me as an expensive investment for a single bucket list trip.
Do you fly for work or to a lake house or similar very often?
I am looking at both normally aspirated 210 and P210 now. Has anyone had any experience with a P210 that has no AC in it? How long it will take to cool down during a hot summer day given it is pressurized, that means less cool air coming into cabin even you are at 8000 altitude. The regular 210 I am sure will cool down pretty quick with vent open once you are high. I heard the vent air coming into a P210 comes from the exhaust bypass, so will the air be warm?
it all depends on my schedule. I can fly 2-3 hours everyday if I need to. want to keep flying and stepping up on higher performance later on. got one child out of college already and close by us. I know most of time it will only carry 2 or 4, and for 5 it might be once or twice a year for family vacation. Just do not want to get a plane that only holds four or five with only 2 hours fuel in it...90% of the time a 4 or lighter 6 seater might be just fine, but certainly I do not want leave anyone out or limit my choices of destinations.
Richard Collins articles are mostly way off base, this is no exception. I wish people would stop pointing to what he said.
Pressurization is a tool, just like anything else on an aircraft. Why would you fly low with pressurization? Easy, because there's weather to stay out of or because the headwinds are bad. When I flew the 414 I had a number of trips I made at 6,000 MSL or less because of those factors. Once I flew from NYC to Kansas at 2,500 MSL the whole way squawking 1200 because of headwinds. It would've been slower at FL180. It was a fun trip.
Lots of 414 pilots I know regularly fly their planes under 10k feet, and only go up when the winds or weather take them there.
Agreed. I normally liked FL180-200 but for me a short trip was 500 nm.
Yeah, mission is critical, and so is airspace. If someone is tooling around NorCal or SoCal airspace, it is likely that they are going to do a TEC route at 5000-9000' in any piston, regardless of what they are flying. Also depends on direction - I bet you were more likely to sit down low going East to West.
Yes, that was when I had the aforementioned 6000 MSL or lower trips, including the 2,500 MSL flight from NYC to KC.
In reality I don't think my average block times improved any going to the 414 from the 310. What did improve was the load carrying capacity due to interior space and the range (414 had 203 gallons, 310 had 140).
Man... more twin talk. The economy must be good.
Have you ever owned before? I feel like owning a plane and facing the maintenance and operating expenses is a learning experience in and of itself, and I sure wouldn’t want to learn that part on a twin, let alone a turbo’ed pressurized twin. As far as I can tell, you don’t have a mission that requires a twin, anyway.
I personally wouldn’t recommend going much past a turbo 210. Super useful, and less painful than a 340 if something goes wrong, although it can still eat you alive.
A quick update...looked pretty hard on few 340As and got really close on buying one but long story short insurance made me change my mind. I bought a T210M with G500, GTN750, JPI900, STEC 55X, and 796 panel mounted and flew 20 hours so far. Love it. Insurance costs me $3900 annually and only 5 hour dual time. Much more reasonable!!!