How about a C-210? Anyone have experience with them? They have close to 2000 useful load and 6 seats. Is there room behind the backseats for baggage?
One of the most comfortable GA plane I've ever sat in was the Saratoga / Lance / Six.. it just feels spacious, like getting into a Suburban..
I'm partial to all facing forward.. only because sitting "backwards" seems awkward to me.. although I feel like many, if not most, prefer the club make the cabin feel more spacious, Bonanza loves that little table thing to make it feel "cabin class" .. sitting backwards in a crash is probably also (marginally) saferDo you prefer all seats facing forward or the club style?
Do you prefer all seats facing forward or the club style?
Really nice 310 write-up. Thank you! I'll take a close look at them on Trade-A-Plane. The fuel management makes my head spin!
I'm not seeing how a 310 meets the useful load requirement here.
There is a classic old brochure comparing a 210, Bonanza, and Piper that showed the interior with seats for 6.. the dude in the back of the 210 was basically hunched over in the "brace for impact" position in order to fit. I cannot find the photo not but I seem to recall @Pilawt posted it.. many moons ago
Lies. Mother in laws are never happy.I'll vote for Club.
But we don't ever plan for six people in our plane, but a max of four people (not a twin). My MIL went with us to San Diego this past Sat/Sun, and she sat in the rear seat, with her feet up on the seat in front of her and was as happy as could be.
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I really love the layout of the Cherokee 6, but it's a little shy on useful load and the max zero fuel weight. So I started looking at twins. The Seneca II looks great, but same problem; useful load would require a lot of air in the tanks and a fuel stop.
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I'm starting to think we need to reel in our expectations and think about the Cherokee 6 with 4 souls + baggage. It seems perfectly suited for that - but we hate to leave the older kids or parents on the ground.
Thanks!
Ken
she sat in the rear seat, with her feet up on the seat in front of her and was as happy as could be.
Okay, what am I missing here? I fly a Cherokee 6. With full fuel (6 hours worth) I have 997lbs. of additional weight I can carry. For my family of 4 that means we can drag along another 300lbs of bags.
If I wanted to put six 200 lb adults into the plane, I could drop the fuel load a bit. I have flown 7 people plus baggage by doing just that.
Think of it like this - 3 hour of fuel in a 6 is 45 gallons on average (I am at 12.5 gph myself). For my plane that means I have 1501 lbs of useful load. 45 gallons of fuel gives me a range of over 400nm and I can still stick 1231 lbs in the plane...
I think the 414 is a little too much plane for us. I'm guessing pressurized = more maint cost.
Too bad the Cessna 207, Stationair 8 is too rare. They keep crashing the few that are left in Alaska.
One of my favorite heavy haulers!
Empty is 1903.7lbs.
Useful is 1496 lbs
Plan cruise at 130kts at 7000’ 65% power. 12.5 gph average.
Aztec owner/operators, most of the ads I see don't include empty weight & max gross weight for calculating useful load. I can look up the MGW. What are your empty weights?
@GRG55 , @Ted DuPuis
Looks like the G8 Airvan is starting to be the replacement of the sleds.
3300 is close enough for some back of napkin W&B ciphering. Thanks!Gross on mine is 5200. I don't have the exact empty weight, but its about 3300. I would have to go to the hangar to get the exact figure.
There is a classic old brochure comparing a 210, Bonanza, and Piper that showed the interior with seats for 6.. the dude in the back of the 210 was basically hunched over in the "brace for impact" position in order to fit. I cannot find the photo not but I seem to recall @Pilawt posted it.. many moons ago
Got it! So, I should tell my wife: “Honey those aren’t 4 seats. It’s 2 seats and 2 ottomans.”
I'm partial to all facing forward.. only because sitting "backwards" seems awkward to me.. although I feel like many, if not most, prefer the club make the cabin feel more spacious, Bonanza loves that little table thing to make it feel "cabin class"...
Why do folks assume this.??
In the 7 years I flew 414/421 the biggest problem was ham fisted new to the plane pilots.
The major problem I ever had with pressurization in a 414/421 was the out flow valve sticking. A little mouse milk squirted in the right area took care of that. And yeah, the 414 might be more than you are needing.
Yes! That's the one. I'm saving it this time. Thanks!Here 'tis:
Always love that picture. That guy in the back of the PA-32 must be pretty short. Copied from a previous post of mine on this subject:
Here is me in the back seat of a 2006 PA-32R-301T (Saratoga II TC). I am 6'2" and reasonably normal proportions.
The first picture is the with the seat in the "full, upright position" and the second is with it reclined one notch (I didn't do 2 notches since that is really leaned back).
Headroom is, clearly, not great. I do wonder if this is dependent on model year/interior.
The people parroting the pressurization = high costs are, almost by definition, the people who will also hamfist turbo engines and particularly GTSIOs.
Do you think they will exit a bout of ownership telling everyone how they ham-fisted their plane around in their first years of ownership, or do you think they'll hand-wave and say "durn pressurizations, so expensive" to anyone who will listen to them?
you're not normal...no one ever had that problem with mine.
Do you prefer all seats facing forward or the club style?
Why do folks assume this.??
^family roadtrip!
The argument that an increasingly complex airplane is no more costly to operate and maintain is simply nonsense.
Just because one owner, with one airplane of a given type, didn't have to repair one particular pressurization system over a comparatively short ownership period doesn't mean the aggregate cost of maintaining piston engine pressurized hulls is the same as a non-pressurized aircraft.
Every effing system on an airplane costs money to maintain properly. Constant speed compared to fixed pitch, retractable gear compared to fixed undercarriage, turbocharged compared to naturally aspirated, and on it goes. The more of these complicated systems you have the more you are going to spend to keep it airworthy, even if you leave the airplane sitting in the hangar all year.
you're not normal...no one ever had that problem with mine.
That’s what my recommendation would be.My 310R had a useful load of 2000 lbs. It could take a 1000 lbs a 1000 miles.
Really nice 310 write-up. Thank you! I'll take a close look at them on Trade-A-Plane. The fuel management makes my head spin!