I've never flown in one and I'm no expert. But from my research and reading in forums. What I gather is they get bad rep from people who never flown it and people seems to want to train in a more "forgiving"(easy to fly) airplane like the cessna. Just my speculation. nothing more.I always thought the Tomahawk was a cool plane. Any reason they've all but disappeared?
If you’re buying an airplane always buy it with the panel you want to fly in it.
That's nice. And yes I know I'm throwing my money away. Thing about this is I don't have to do them right away or all at once. I can use the plane to finish up my ppl and then add what I need. most of them comes with 1 com. So I only need 1 nav com with glide slope(i know its not required) adsb can be done next year. So I can install a little bit as I go. If I buy the plane with full ifr pannel they tend to go over my budget and they comes with coffee grinder. With all said and done. If the plane treat me well enough and I plan on keeping it I don't mind making it rain on the plane a little bit haha.
Dumb question. Well, maybe not so dumb. Would you say a C150 is as good as a C152?
Dumb question. Well, maybe not so dumb. Would you say a C150 is as good as a C152?
But who uses them? (flaps like this) I went thru this mess a year ago. Glad I bowed out of the buying madness. Observed a pre-buy of a bonanza today, what a joke. Everyone left happy and no-one died during this event at the ramp. @Walbro is everywhere it seems! heheh.Yes. 152 has 10 more hp and 30* flaps, while 150 has 40* flaps. But not a lot of difference as far as handling.
sounds like a planThe downside of doing it piecemeal is EVERYTHING “touches” the audio panel harness. Paying multiple times to re-do the audio panel harness labor is no good. Pre-plan with your avionics guy or gal exactly what you’re going to “put in later” and have them build the harness with connectors lengthened to the right locations and coil them up and tie them off in those locations for the later additions. Plug and play. Pay once for that, not three times.
"the only dumb question is the one not asked." heard it somewhere in a far far galaxyDumb question
So with the Mogas is there a downside to it? seems too good to be true. maybe I'm skeptical lol. But there must be a reason not everyone do it.
If that is the only down side and it can save me a few thousands a year. I'll haul it over everyday if I have toto haul it from a local gas station if you can find one that sells no ethanol gas.
I found a few skipper that cost about 30k. Wayyyyy over my budget. They look nice though.Tomahawks with the two stall strips on the leading edges seemed OK to me - I have some time in those. Seemed roomier than the 150/152s from my youth. The AA1C was fun, but too twitchy for IFR training, IMHO.
You might find a Beech Skipper - looks a lot like a Tomahawk. . .
I’d go with the runout engine.If you guys have to pick 1 choice out of these 2 what would you choose?assuming these are the same plane at the same price.
1. A plane that is equipped with everything you need and engine either passed TBO or almost there(high time)
2. low- mid time engine plane but you might have to do some upgrade on the panel to get it ifr capable.
good pointbut I’d prefer having more say in WHO does the engine.
Option 1 for me.If you guys have to pick 1 choice out of these 2 what would you choose?assuming these are the same plane at the same price.
1. A plane that is equipped with everything you need and engine either passed TBO or almost there(high time)
2. low- mid time engine plane but you might have to do some upgrade on the panel to get it ifr capable.
If you guys have to pick 1 choice out of these 2 what would you choose?assuming these are the same plane at the same price.
1. A plane that is equipped with everything you need and engine either passed TBO or almost there(high time)
2. low- mid time engine plane but you might have to do some upgrade on the panel to get it ifr capable.
The Pa140 is the best bet for the OPs mission. Simple enough for the private, and they can be had inexpensively with enough equipment to do the IR (and the commercial). Isn't a simpler or more easily maintained airframe. Only an idiot does a major avionics upgrade on an aircraft they don't intend to keep for a long time. Better yet, find flight school and rent their aircraft. Probably the most cost effective strategy in this thread.
From the tone of this thread I think the OP is going to ignore all the good advice he's been given and go off and do whatever it is he decided to do in the first place.
If you guys have to pick 1 choice out of these 2 what would you choose?assuming these are the same plane at the same price.
1. A plane that is equipped with everything you need and engine either passed TBO or almost there(high time)
2. low- mid time engine plane but you might have to do some upgrade on the panel to get it ifr capable.
Primary two seat trainers are usually not being rented out for much of a profit margin if any. If you can’t afford to rent it, you can’t afford to buy it.
That's part of the reason I was looking for a 2 seaters too. Operating cost is wayyyy cheaper. Only thing is it's a little hard finding one with IR equipped. and the useful load is awful.If you fly enough, a two seat trainer is less than half the cost per hour than rentals. $50 vs $100, roughly.
My 150 was $54/hr all in (including FBO fees and such). Nothing available in ATL area for less than $100, and that was hobbs time, not tach. So easy 15-20% difference there.
If you fly enough, a two seat trainer is less than half the cost per hour than rentals. $50 vs $100, roughly.
My 150 was $54/hr all in (including FBO fees and such). Nothing available in ATL area for less than $100, and rentals are hobbs time, not tach. So easy 15-20% difference there.
I agree. What most people aren’t honest about is how much they’re going to fly.
104 hours a year is two hours every week. People talk about 100 hours being the “magic” number where most people should own rather than rent.
Not saying that number is perfect, but it’s a commonly announced and known discussion starting point.
So, to get say “double the value” out of a personally owned aircraft let’s just double the number. 208 hours a year. That’s 4 hours a week and not super duper hard to hit, but you have to fly more than four hours a week when the aircraft isn’t down for regular or unscheduled maintenance.
Throw that in and you’re essentially hitting numbers that mean you need half a day of flying per week to really get high value out of ownership.
Then we have to talk about cash flow. The major depreciation number on any aircraft is the time flown off of the engine. So as you fly it off, the airplane is becoming worth less and less.
There’s some elasticity there and some “break points” that prices cluster around... new to about 200 hours on the engine is about the same price. 200 to mid-TBO tends to stick about the same. And half past TBO until maybe 200 hours until the end of TBO another tier. And 200 left to TBO and beyond, another.
So there’s a stair step depreciation thing in the pricing. But it’s still on a downward trend line until a new infusion of cash and a new engine.
So that factors in, too. Fly it more and sooner? You’re sucking away the value of the aircraft.
Those you do fiscally pretty well with the “Buy, fly the crap out of it fast, and sell” methodology, usually didn’t cross one of those “psychological barrier” numbers like “half of TBO” or similar.
If you can dedicate to flying 4-5 hours a week, you can save some bucks by buying and not renting, but you have to have the time and actually go do it.
But who uses them? (flaps like this) I went thru this mess a year ago. Glad I bowed out of the buying madness. Observed a pre-buy of a bonanza today, what a joke. Everyone left happy and no-one died during this event at the ramp. @Walbro is everywhere it seems! heheh.
If I get the right plane Then around 6 hours a week is no problem. Both time wise and operational cost wise. That’s what I plan to do at the minimum anyway.I agree. What most people aren’t honest about is how much they’re going to fly.
104 hours a year is two hours every week. People talk about 100 hours being the “magic” number where most people should own rather than rent.
Not saying that number is perfect, but it’s a commonly announced and known discussion starting point.
So, to get say “double the value” out of a personally owned aircraft let’s just double the number. 208 hours a year. That’s 4 hours a week and not super duper hard to hit, but you have to fly more than four hours a week when the aircraft isn’t down for regular or unscheduled maintenance.
Throw that in and you’re essentially hitting numbers that mean you need half a day of flying per week to really get high value out of ownership.
Then we have to talk about cash flow. The major depreciation number on any aircraft is the time flown off of the engine. So as you fly it off, the airplane is becoming worth less and less.
There’s some elasticity there and some “break points” that prices cluster around... new to about 200 hours on the engine is about the same price. 200 to mid-TBO tends to stick about the same. And half past TBO until maybe 200 hours until the end of TBO another tier. And 200 left to TBO and beyond, another.
So there’s a stair step depreciation thing in the pricing. But it’s still on a downward trend line until a new infusion of cash and a new engine.
So that factors in, too. Fly it more and sooner? You’re sucking away the value of the aircraft.
Those you do fiscally pretty well with the “Buy, fly the crap out of it fast, and sell” methodology, usually didn’t cross one of those “psychological barrier” numbers like “half of TBO” or similar.
If you can dedicate to flying 4-5 hours a week, you can save some bucks by buying and not renting, but you have to have the time and actually go do it.
That’s why I am budgeting my cost for the plane real low so I have reserve for if something happen right as soon as I sign the paper. I could get a low time plane but I would have no reserve for emergency. If something happen I’d have to wait a couple months before I can get it up and running again.I personally wouldn't buy a run out engine if I were planning on flying a lot and had no money to do a proper MOH in the near future.
First question you need to ask is are you keeping the plane long term or just using it for obtaining ratings? That would color you decision about what kind of plane you could tolerate. Second question is can you afford operational costs? That means about $100-120 per hour for 100 hours a year on a mid or low time engine if you are being honest about engine reserve. Third, can you afford the necessary investments to bring the avionics up to speed? Fourth, are you prepared to drop $1000-$5000 on a major unexpected repair? Even the simple stuff like magnetos, muffler, bad cylinder, etc are expensive.You can run all the spreadsheets and rosy scenarios you want but when a jug starts pumping oil, or the nav is out of tolerance, etc., you gotta deal with it.
One little dirty secret about ownership: the first couple of years are pretty expensive fixing maintenance issues the previous owner deferred.
Man I plan to fly a lot but 16 hours a week would be hard even for me lol. Planning for6-10/week which is good amount for me.Yeah, my example was pretty extreme, I flew 400 hours in 6 months
I also bought a plane with a fresh overhaul so I took the risk of infant mortality, but that way when I sold it, it was a "prime" engine to sell (400ish SMOH within the past 12 months).
The thing about owning is, that you start doing missions that you just cannot do in a rental. Overnight rentals are often very restricted, especially in trainer airplanes.
Man I plan to fly a lot but 16 hours a week would be hard even for me lol. Planning for6-10/week which is good amount for me.
Even if I plan on getting a tail wheel, citabria would be way out of budget. The reason I don’t want to buy tw is because most of them comes with vfr panel and if I buy them I can only use it for my ppl and time building.Well, you should reconsider the Citabria, if for no other reason than after 100hrs in it you’ll be a lot better pilot. Did you say you would like to make a living from this flying thing? Learn your craft!