kgruber
Final Approach
The OP plane is a perfectly good 182 for someone who would have similar requirements.
Might as well just take $80,000 and toss it out over the ocean. The OP airplane is......at best......a parts airplane.
The OP plane is a perfectly good 182 for someone who would have similar requirements.
Might as well just take $80,000 and toss it out over the ocean. The OP airplane is......at best......a parts airplane.
Might as well just take $80,000 and toss it out over the ocean. The OP airplane is......at best......a parts airplane.
How would one lose $80k buying a plane that costs $27k?
What do you think the chances are of the OP buying the plane for $27k and being able to fly it for 300-500 hours with just the cost of fuel, annuals, and a cylinder every other year?
How does that come anywhere close to tossing $80k in the ocean?
It's like an above poster stated......You haven't bought many airplanes, have you?
But if the engine checks out, go for it.
Where does anybody get the idea the OP wants an $80k 182 to fly around in?
What if the OP wants a $35k 182 to fly around on VFR trips with 2 adults and 2 kids and already owns an iPad and ForeFlight?
The OP could make a lot of great memories with this plane and save the other $40k for hotels, DisneyLand, and log rides.
Why would anyone buy an airplane that's been sitting outside for its life?
Have you bought a fixer-upper? I have. It's fixed up and I'm okay with it. But cheap-seeming planes aren't that cheap.
That is pretty much nonsense.
Setting a budget for $27k acquisition price has nothing to do with what the Buyer can afford.
There is no connection between budget and wealth. I know way too many people who will foolishly set budgets beyond what their wealth will support.
The opposite, setting a low budget, should be viewed as good advice.
Again, a $27k 4-seat 182 is a helluva traveling machine for many.
There is no need to put new paint on it.
There is no need to fix a few broken interior plastics.
There is no need to upgrade avionics, panel, and radio.
The 1500 hour engine is a concern, but, so is a 1200 hour, and a 900 hour, and a 600 hour, and a 300 hour, and a 25 hour SMOH engine.
The OP might have good luck with the engine, and maybe replace a $950 cylinder every other year for the next 5 years.
For the right person, depending on goals, this could be a great plane for the next 300-500 hours. That's a lot of flying.
This. I'm looking for an animal rescue aircraft. Animals don't care about aesthetics and neither do I.
Alrighty professional tire kickers.... What is wrong with this plane?
http://www.trade-a-plane.com/detail...+Piston/1964/Cessna/182G+Skylane/2065687.html
Ya, I know it's got the old skool ADF but the airport I'd likely base an aircraft at has a localizer approach that makes use of an NDB.
I'm still daydreaming about buying a plane "one of these days."
Isn't TBO 2000 on engine? Don't many of them go well past TBO?
Although I'm not a fan of the practice, the owner claims that he ran the engine when the plane wasn't going to be flown in awhile. He's one of "the old guys" who hangs out on Sunday at the airport.
How would one lose $80k buying a plane that costs $27k?
What do you think the chances are of the OP buying the plane for $27k and being able to fly it for 300-500 hours with just the cost of fuel, annuals, and a cylinder every other year?
How does that come anywhere close to tossing $80k in the ocean?
Cheap paint and interiors are cheap. Good paint and interiors are not.
I bought a "deal" of an aircraft that's now half way decent. Would have been cheaper to buy decent in the first place. This looks like a project plane.
Nonsense.
Take your interior to a good rod and custom shop in TJ, bring your own materials and you'll get a job far exceeding what's found at nearly any "aviation" upholstery shop for a fraction of the price.
Paint is just labor intensive and a attention to detail.
Nonsense.
Take your interior to a good rod and custom shop in TJ, bring your own materials and you'll get a job far exceeding what's found at nearly any "aviation" upholstery shop for a fraction of the price.
Paint is just labor intensive and a attention to detail.[/QUOTE
How many have you done on your dime? Pictures?
I know of a Seneca someone bought for 30K spent 90K on it sold if for 30K. Just because you might spend $$$ on it doesn't make it worth that much more.
Alrighty professional tire kickers.... What is wrong with this plane?
http://www.trade-a-plane.com/detail...+Piston/1964/Cessna/182G+Skylane/2065687.html
Ya, I know it's got the old skool ADF but the airport I'd likely base an aircraft at has a localizer approach that makes use of an NDB.
I'm still daydreaming about buying a plane "one of these days."
looks good, I'm just not a fan of the pre six pack "throw the gauges on the dash where they stick" approach. But I'm also a poor non profit that will have to take whatever they can get (if I can ever get).
Only takes a few thousand dollars to fix that, and some sheet metal.
Not sure what is a "fixer upper"? My paint looks good from 100 yards, not good from 5 feet.
My interior is a 5/10... or maybe a 4/10, or maybe a 6/10... Or, who knows? The pic I posted above shows a bit of the fabric on the dash peeling up. Maybe that is a 3/10?? Doesn't affect the plane in the slightest.
My engine, so far, runs great, the plane flies straight, the radio works great.
The whisky compass leaks.
I have posted my operating costs in another thread, and it was something like $85/hour for a 182.
they are how you end up with the plane you want over time without incurring debt, and that has both direct and indirect financial value.
Nonsense.
Take your interior to a good rod and custom shop in TJ, bring your own materials and you'll get a job far exceeding what's found at nearly any "aviation" upholstery shop for a fraction of the price.
Paint is just labor intensive and a attention to detail.
How many have you done on your dime? Pictures?
That is a rarely made point and quite important. If you can get your project into annual, and it doesn't fall out of the sky, you can take your time getting it into shape while you fly it. There truly is value in that.
I've done a lot of upholstery work on other people's dime, it's really not that expensive until you get into really exotic materials and hides.
Interior, not limited to upholstery. My last one had near 200 hours of labor by the time it was complete with the spill-over work including new panel and glass. That was the third interior reno in this plane. This time I got it right. I had it painted 15 years ago and it still looks great. That's the work of a great paint guy. That cost was about $15K 15 years ago. Quality isn't cheap.
Interior, not limited to upholstery. My last one had near 200 hours of labor by the time it was complete with the spill-over work including new panel and glass. That was the third interior reno in this plane. This time I got it right.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zo06DxOIJy8
I had it painted 15 years ago and it still looks great. That's the work of a great paint guy. That cost was about $15K 15 years ago. Quality isn't cheap.
Why paint it or do anything with the upholstery? If there's no corrosion and the engine checks out, just fly it as is. No need to put money into it that's not needed. All that crap is just window dressing. Doesn't make the plane fly better.
Why paint it or do anything with the upholstery? If there's no corrosion and the engine checks out, just fly it as is. No need to put money into it that's not needed. All that crap is just window dressing. Doesn't make the plane fly better.